Images are processed locally in your browser. No upload required

Compress Image

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Compress JPG, PNG & WebP

Compress images online directly in your browser. Reduce JPG, PNG and WebP file size without uploading your photos.


Compress WebP Image for WordPress quickly

Optimize WebP images for WordPress quickly. Use browser-based settings for blog posts and media library uploads with no upload required.

How to use this preset

  1. Upload one or more WebP images from your device.
  2. Start with 78% quality and a 1600px maximum width for WordPress.
  3. Preview the result, adjust quality or dimensions if needed, then download the optimized image.

Recommended settings

Output formatWebP
Starting quality78%
Maximum width1600px / Auto height
ProcessingLocal browser processing

Best for

  • WebP quickly
  • WordPress
  • blog posts and media library uploads
  • batch compression
  • local privacy-first processing

Optimization tips

  • For quickly, reduce dimensions before lowering quality too far.
  • WebP is selected as the export format for this preset.
  • If the output is still too large, lower the maximum width first and then adjust quality.

Privacy and browser limits

PicCraft processes WebP images in your browser. Files are not uploaded to a server, but very large images still depend on your device memory and browser canvas limits.

Frequently asked questions

Are my WebP images uploaded?

All work happens locally in the browser; no upload is required.

Is this preset reasonable for WordPress?

Yes. It starts from settings selected for blog posts and media library uploads and fast browser processing.

Can I compress WebP quickly?

Yes. Start with this preset, then adjust quality or width if your exact file-size target needs more tuning.

Which output format does this preset use?

This preset exports as WebP. You can still change the format before downloading.

What if the image is still too large?

Reduce maximum width, lower quality gradually, or process fewer large files at once.

Why can very large images fail?

Browsers limit memory and canvas size. Reduce maximum width or process fewer files if an export fails.

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