Free TinyPNG Alternative
TinyPNG is a great service, but uploads go to its servers and the free tier is capped. LazyParadise compresses your images entirely in the browser — there is no upload, no daily limit, and no paid tier.
Why look for an alternative
TinyPNG's smart-quantization algorithm is excellent, but every image you compress is uploaded to their cloud. For sensitive images (legal documents, internal screenshots, personal photos), that's a privacy concern. LazyParadise runs the compression in your browser using modern image APIs — your file never leaves your device.
LazyParadise vs TinyPNG
| Feature | TinyPNG | LazyParadise |
|---|---|---|
| Image compression quality | Excellent (proprietary algorithm) | Excellent (browser-native + smart sizing) |
| File upload required | Yes — uploaded to TinyPNG cloud | No — runs locally in browser |
| Free tier limits | 20 images per session | Unlimited |
| Max file size | 5 MB free / 75 MB paid | Limited only by your browser memory |
| Batch processing | Up to 20 in browser; API for more | Unlimited via Batch Photo Editor |
| Account / signup | Required for API & dev plans | None ever |
| Photoshop / Sketch plugin | Yes (paid) | No |
| API access | Yes (paid) | No |
| Cost | Free tier + paid plans | 100% free, forever |
Best for
- Compressing sensitive images you don't want uploaded
- High-volume one-off compression
- Privacy-conscious users
- Compressing without an account
Stick with TinyPNG for
- Photoshop or Sketch plugin workflows
- Programmatic API integration (TinyPNG offers an API)
Recommended LazyParadise tools
Frequently asked questions
Is LazyParadise as good as TinyPNG for compression?
For most images, yes. TinyPNG's proprietary algorithm has a slight edge on PNG palettization, but LazyParadise's target-size approach often produces smaller files because you can dial in exactly the size you need.
Why use a TinyPNG alternative?
Privacy (no uploads), no daily limits, no signup, and unlimited file size beyond browser memory.
Does LazyParadise work offline?
After the page loads once, yes — all compression runs in your browser without further network requests.
Can I integrate LazyParadise into my build pipeline?
Not via API. For automation, TinyPNG's API is still the better choice. For interactive use, LazyParadise wins.
Is the compressed quality identical?
Visually, yes. TinyPNG and LazyParadise both target ~85% quality by default; the difference is imperceptible on almost every image.
Is LazyParadise really 100% free?
Yes. No tiers, no usage caps, no upsells.