Compress PDF to 500KB
Designed for portals with strict limits. Targets are best-effort, not guaranteed.
β Swipe tools β’ or use the big tabs above β
Click to upload or drag PDF here
Max 50MB β’ PDF only
π± On mobile? Tap above to pick from Files, Photos, or iCloud/Google Drive
Tip: Scanned PDFs behave like photos. Strong compression may soften images.
If you need an exact portal limit, try 200KB after 500KB.
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Which file size should I choose?
The right size depends on where you're uploading. Here's what works for the most common situations:
Job applications: Indeed, LinkedIn, ZipRecruiter, Workday
Email: Gmail, Outlook, most providers
General uploads: Most online forms
Government portals: USCIS, visa applications, DMV
School submissions: College applications, financial aid
Strict systems: When 500KB fails
Very strict limits: Rare, but some systems require it
Try 200KB first: 100KB may reduce quality noticeably
π‘ Tip: Start with 500KB. If your portal rejects it, try 200KB. Most issues are solved at these two levels.
Why people search βcompress PDF to 500KBβ
Most "compress PDF" tools chase general size reduction. But real users are usually trying to pass a specific gate: an upload form that refuses anything over a limit. Common limits are 500KB and 200KB, especially on job portals, government services, school submissions, and email systems.
A PDF becomes large for a few predictable reasons: scanned pages (photos in disguise), high-resolution images, and unoptimized embedded assets. The fastest way to reduce size is to optimize images inside the PDF. Text typically stays crisp, while images and scans are where quality can soften under strong compression.
If you tried "compress pdf online", "pdf compress online", or "online compress pdf", you're in the right place. getPDFpress focuses on the outcomes people actually need: a file that uploads successfully, fast, on mobile.
Want deeper help? Visit Learn for guides like: "PDF size limits for job applications", "Why scanned PDFs are huge", and "How to email large PDFs".
Frequently Asked Questions
My portal still rejects the PDF even under 500KB. Why?
Two common reasons: (1) the site has a strict limit like 500KB exactly and rejects anything even slightly over, and (2) the portal is rejecting the page dimensions (for example, a page that isnβt standard letter/A4), which is a different issue than file size.
Why canβt some scanned PDFs reach 200KB?
Scanned PDFs are mostly images. If the scan is high-DPI or full color, it can be technically difficult to hit very small limits without softening the image. If 200KB is required, try grayscale, lower scan DPI (often 150β200), and remove unnecessary pages.
Will compression ruin quality?
Text usually stays crisp. Quality loss typically affects photos and scanned pages. If your PDF is text-heavy, you can often compress significantly with minimal visible change. For scan-heavy PDFs, use a gentler level first.
Can I compress a password-protected PDF?
Not usually. A compressor needs access to the document contents. If your PDF is encrypted, youβll need to unlock it first (using the password) before compressing.
Why didn't my PDF compress much (or at all)?
Some PDFs are already well-optimized and can't compress further without quality loss. Screenshot PDFs, web captures, and previously compressed files often fall into this categoryβthey're already using optimized images at web-friendly resolutions (72-96 DPI). Similarly, text-only PDFs with vector graphics have little to compress since they contain no large images. You'll see the biggest compression gains with high-resolution scans, uncompressed photos, and camera-generated PDFs (often 300+ DPI). If your file won't compress, it's likely already as small as it can be without significant quality degradation.
What should I try if upload still fails?
Try a stricter target (200KB), split the PDF into smaller parts, or re-scan at a lower DPI. Some portals also block certain characters in filenames, so renaming the file to letters/numbers only can help.