Compress a PDF to 100 KB
Hit a "maximum 100 KB" limit? This page is preset to do exactly that: add your PDF and it automatically finds the highest quality that fits under 100 KB — typical for job portals, government e-filing and university application forms that cap uploads at 100 KB. If your file already fits (or a lossless clean-up gets it there), quality isn’t touched at all; if 100 KB is physically impossible for your document, you’ll get the smallest achievable file and an honest note. Everything runs in your browser — the document is never uploaded.
How to use the Compress PDF to 100 KB tool
Select or drag your PDF — the target is already set to 100 KB.
Click “Compress to size”.
Download a PDF under 100 KB, ready for the upload form.
Your files stay on your device
This tool runs entirely in your browser using JavaScript and WebAssembly. There is no upload step and no server processing — open your network panel and check: zero document data is transmitted. It even keeps working offline once the page has loaded.
Frequently asked questions
Why do sites demand PDFs under 100 KB?
Portals cap file sizes to keep their storage and processing predictable — job portals, government e-filing and university application forms that cap uploads at 100 KB are the classic cases. The limit is enforced automatically, so a file even slightly over gets rejected; compressing to just under 100 KB is the reliable fix.
Will my PDF still be readable at 100 KB?
Usually yes. For typical documents of a few pages, 100 KB preserves clearly readable text. Very long or image-heavy documents lose more sharpness — the tool always keeps the best quality that fits, and tells you honestly if the target couldn't be reached.
Is my document uploaded to compress it?
No. The compression runs entirely in your browser on your own device — nothing is transmitted. That matters, because size-limited uploads are usually IDs, certificates and application documents: exactly the files you don’t want on a stranger’s server.
Is it safe to use this tool with confidential documents?
Yes — and verifiably so. PDFAgent has no upload step: your file is processed by JavaScript running in your own browser and never leaves your device. You can open your browser’s network panel (or even go offline after loading the page) and confirm that no document data is transmitted.
Related tools
Popular size limits
Preset pages for the limits upload forms ask for most: