Squeeze your files.
Keep the quality.
Free image & video compression that runs entirely in your browser. No uploads. No signup. No limits.
Drop a file or click to browse
JPEG · PNG · WebP · HEIC · MP4 · MOV · WebM · max 500 MB
How it works
Three steps. Done.
Drop your file
Drag and drop any image or video. JPEG, PNG, WebP, HEIC, MP4, MOV, WebM.
Adjust quality
Move the slider to find your perfect balance between file size and visual quality.
Download
Your compressed file is ready instantly. Files never leave your device.
Supported formats
Every format. One tool.
Server-side mozjpeg compression. 40-60% smaller without visible quality loss.
Converted to WebP automatically. Up to 95% smaller with full transparency support.
Re-compressed at optimal quality. The modern standard for web images.
iPhone photos converted and compressed automatically. Works in Safari.
FFmpeg WASM compression. Reduce video file size without re-uploading anywhere.
Server-side PDF compression coming soon. Join the waitlist for early access.
Server-side video compression — 300MB in under 60 seconds instead of minutes. Coming soon.
Built by a Navy veteran in Patong, Thailand
After 30 years in US Navy aviation as an Aviation Maintenance Officer — responsible for naval aviation readiness, logistics, and airworthiness — I started building digital tools that work the way operations should: simple on the outside, solid on the inside. PixSnug™ is one of them.
☕ Buy me a coffeeFAQ
Common questions
Are my files safe?
Yes. All compression happens in your browser or on our server with no storage. Files are never saved, logged, or shared. Server-processed files are deleted immediately after compression.
Is PixSnug really free?
Yes, completely free. No signup, no limits, no watermarks. If you find it useful, you can buy me a coffee — but it's never required.
Why convert PNG to WebP?
WebP is a modern format that achieves significantly better compression than PNG while maintaining quality. All modern browsers support it.
Why does HEIC only work in Safari?
HEIC is Apple's format and requires Apple's codec, which is only available natively on Apple devices. On Safari and Chrome/Edge on Mac, it works automatically. On Windows or Firefox, export as JPEG first.
What's coming next?
PDF compression, batch processing, API access for developers, and a WordPress plugin. Join the waitlist to be first.