How to compress an image to 1.5MB
Many websites and forms enforce a strict maximum file size, and hitting an exact target like 1.5MB by hand means repeatedly exporting at different quality levels until one happens to fit. Pixohub does that search for you: it re-encodes your image as a JPEG and automatically tunes the compression quality until the result lands at 1.5MB or just under, keeping the picture as sharp as the size budget allows.
1.5MB gives near-original quality while trimming oversized camera exports that would otherwise be several megabytes. Whatever the reason you need 1.5MB, this tool is built specifically for high-resolution photos with plenty of detail. Because everything runs locally in your browser using the canvas API, your image is never uploaded to a server — a real advantage when the file is a personal photo or an ID document for an application.
The tradeoff to understand is simple: the smaller the target, the more the encoder must discard. Larger photos squeezed into a very small budget will show more compression softening than a modest photo at the same target. If 1.5MB looks too soft for your needs, first reduce the pixel dimensions with our image resizer — fewer pixels means the encoder can keep higher quality within the same 1.5MB budget.
Tips for the best results at 1.5MB
Resizing before compressing is the single most effective trick: a 4000-pixel-wide photo forced to 1.5MB looks far worse than the same photo resized to the dimensions you actually display and then compressed to 1.5MB. Combine this tool with resize for the cleanest outcome. If you need to convert format as well, our WebP converter can shrink files even further at the same visual quality.
Need to hit 1.5MB across many images at once? Use bulk image compress to process a whole batch and download them as a zip. For a general, slider-based compressor without a fixed target, try the standard compress image tool.