How to compress images for email without losing quality
Most email providers cap attachments at around 20–25 MB, and a handful of photos straight off a modern phone can blow past that fast. Here’s how to shrink images so they actually send — without turning them into a blurry mess.
Try it free: Packfinch’s image compressor does everything below right in your browser — nothing uploads, so your images never leave your device.
Why phone photos are so big
A single photo from a recent smartphone can be 5–12 MB, because the camera captures far more resolution and detail than any screen or email actually needs. Attach four or five and you’re instantly over the limit. The good news: most of that size is invisible — you can cut a photo’s file size by 70–90% and the person receiving it usually can’t tell the difference on screen.
The two levers that shrink an image
There are only two things that meaningfully change an image’s file size:
- Quality (compression level): how aggressively detail is squeezed. Dropping from 100% to around 70–80% quality often halves the size with no visible change.
- Format: saving as JPG or WebP instead of PNG can shrink a photo dramatically (see our format guide).
For emailing photos, the sweet spot is usually a JPG or WebP at roughly 70–80% quality. That’s small enough to send several at once and still sharp enough to look great.
Step by step
- 1. Gather your images into one place so you can do them in a batch.
- 2. Open Packfinch and drop them all in at once.
- 3. Set the quality slider to around 72–80 and watch the savings meter — you’ll usually see 60–85% shaved off.
- 4. Keep the format as JPG for maximum email compatibility, or WebP if you know the recipient is on anything modern.
- 5. Download — grab them individually, or use “Download all” to get a single zip — and attach.
A privacy note that matters for email
Many online “compress for email” tools upload your photos to their servers to do the work. If your images are personal — family photos, documents, ID scans — that’s worth thinking about. Packfinch does the compression entirely inside your browser, so the files never leave your device. Nothing is uploaded, nothing is stored, and you can even work offline once the page has loaded.
Quick tips
- If a compressed photo still looks slightly soft, nudge the quality up a few points and re-download — it’s instant.
- Sending many images? A zipped batch is tidier for the recipient than a dozen separate attachments.
- For truly huge sets (like a whole event), consider a shared link instead of email — but for everyday handfuls, compression is all you need.