Compress Image to 500 KB Online — Web Hero & Blog Images

Shrink a large hero image or blog featured photo to under 500 KB in your browser — a size that keeps pages fast without visibly sacrificing quality. Drop in the file and download the result.

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Use it right here — already set up for this task

Compresor de Imágenes

Comprimir Imagen al Tamaño Deseado

Suba una imagen y establezca el tamaño máximo deseado. Gratis, seguro y funciona en su navegador.

Arrastre y suelte una imagen aquí

o haga clic para explorar (PNG, JPG, WebP — máx. 50MB)

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Acerca del Compresor de Imágenes

Nuestro compresor de imágenes avanzado utiliza compresión adaptativa multipase para lograr una reducción óptima del tamaño. Establezca su tamaño objetivo exacto y deje que el motor encuentre el mejor equilibrio entre calidad y tamaño.

Características:

  • Establezca su tamaño máximo exacto (MB o KB)
  • Compresión adaptativa multipase con búsqueda inteligente de calidad
  • Soporte para formatos PNG, JPG y WebP
  • Límite de archivo de entrada de hasta 50MB
  • Funciona completamente en su navegador — los archivos nunca salen de su dispositivo
  • Completamente gratis sin necesidad de registro

Estándares y Referencias

Última actualización: 2026-03-10

Why this matters

Hero images and blog featured photos are usually the single largest asset on a page, and an unoptimized one — 3–6 MB straight from a camera or stock photo library — can single-handedly tank a Core Web Vitals score and push Largest Contentful Paint past Google's recommended threshold. 500 KB is a practical sweet spot for large, wide images: still visually rich enough for a full-bleed banner, but small enough to load quickly on mobile connections. Compressing before upload is far faster than waiting for a CMS plugin to do it at publish time.

Step by step

  1. 1
    Open the Image Compressor
    The target is already set to 500 KB — drop in your hero or featured image.
  2. 2
    Compress
    The compressor iterates quality settings in your browser until the file is at or under 500 KB.
  3. 3
    Compare
    Check the preview at full width — 500 KB holds up well even for large banner images.
  4. 4
    Resize first if needed
    For very large source images, resize to your site's actual display width first with the Image Resizer, then compress.
  5. 5
    Download and publish
    Save the compressed image and upload it to your CMS or website.

Frequently asked questions

Why 500 KB for a hero image specifically?

It is large enough to preserve rich detail across a full-width banner while staying small enough to avoid hurting Largest Contentful Paint, a key Core Web Vitals metric.

Will 500 KB be enough for a full-width banner image?

Yes, for most photographic hero images at typical web display widths (1600–2000 px). Extremely detailed or high-contrast images may show very slight softening.

Is my image uploaded anywhere during compression?

No. All processing happens locally in your browser. Nothing is sent to a server until you manually publish it.

Should I resize before or after compressing?

Resize first if your source image is much larger than your site's display width — a 6000×4000 px photo shrunk to 1920 px wide will compress to 500 KB with noticeably better quality than compressing the full-resolution original.

What about WebP for even smaller hero images?

WebP typically shrinks another 25–35% versus JPG at the same visual quality. Convert with the Image Format Converter after compressing if your CMS supports WebP.

Does this help my page speed score?

Yes — oversized hero images are one of the most common causes of poor Largest Contentful Paint scores in Google PageSpeed Insights and Core Web Vitals.

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