Use Case
Compress PDF for under 1 MB
Free online tool — no signup, no software, instant results.
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Reducing a PDF to under 1 MB is a common requirement for standard email attachments and company intranets. Our free online PDF compressor can shrink most PDFs to this target without visible quality loss. Simply upload your file, apply high compression, and check the resulting size — typically you'll hit the target in one pass.
How to Use – Step by Step
1
Upload your PDF
Select your PDF file — even large files over 10 MB will be compressed significantly.
2
Apply maximum compression
Select "High" compression to achieve the smallest possible file size.
3
Check the output size
Download the compressed file and verify it is under 1 MB. If not, try compressing again or reduce image DPI.
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Pro Tips
- Convert any colour images in the PDF to greyscale to save additional space.
- Remove unnecessary pages before compressing to reduce base file size.
- If the PDF contains embedded fonts, subsetting them can reduce size by 20–40%.
- For scanned PDFs, OCR the document first, then compress — text-layer PDFs are much smaller.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can any PDF be compressed to under 1 MB?
Most text-heavy PDFs can be. Very image-dense PDFs may not reach under 1 MB without visible quality reduction.
Does compression affect digital signatures?
Yes — compression can invalidate digital signatures. Sign after compressing.
Why do portals enforce a under 1 MB limit?
Server storage costs and slow connection speeds in many regions drive these restrictions.
What if my PDF is still too large after compression?
Try splitting the PDF, removing images, or converting colour pages to black-and-white.
Is there any loss in text quality?
No. Text in PDFs is vector-based and not affected by image compression.
