Free · 100% browser-based · No upload

Compress image to 50 KB
clear photo, tiny file.

The most common limit on exam forms, job portals and KYC uploads. Drop any photo — from any phone — and imgora fits it under 50 KB automatically, privately, in your browser.

Drop your photo here

any image · comes back under 50 KB

Your photos never leave this device.

Different limit? Compress to 20 KB · Compress to 100 KB

Why 50 KB

The exam-form sweet spot.

Enough space for a genuinely clear photo — if the compression is done intelligently. That's the whole trick.

Application photos that pass

SSC, UPSC, IBPS and bank portals commonly cap application photos at 50KB. imgora targets the limit precisely, so your upload passes on the first try instead of the fifth.

From 8 MB to 50 KB in one drop

Phone cameras produce photos over 100× bigger than the limit. imgora resizes and compresses in one automatic step — you never touch a quality slider.

Private by architecture

Your application photo is an identity document. imgora compresses it inside your browser — it never reaches a server, ours or anyone else’s.

FAQ

Compressing to 50 KB, answered.

How do I compress a photo to 50KB without losing clarity?

Drop your photo here — imgora automatically searches for the sharpest possible dimensions and quality that fit under 50KB. A typical passport-style photo stays perfectly clear at this size.

Which uploads usually require 50KB photos?

Passport-style photos for SSC, UPSC and bank exam applications are commonly capped at 20–50KB. KYC portals, scholarship forms and many job applications use the same limit.

Can I compress a phone photo (3–8 MB) directly to 50KB?

Yes. imgora handles the full journey — a 4032×3024 iPhone or Android photo comes out appropriately resized and compressed to fit the limit, in one drop, in a few seconds.

Is my photo uploaded anywhere?

No. The entire compression runs in your browser. For ID and application photos this matters — your documents never touch a server.

The form says 50KB but rejects my file — why?

Some portals also check dimensions or insist on JPG format specifically. imgora always outputs JPG, which is what forms expect. If a dimension requirement is listed (like 200×230), check the form’s instructions carefully.