Compress PDF to 10 MB
10 MB is the 'can I actually send this' threshold. Many email systems cap a single message's attachments around 10 MB, so big PDFs stuffed with high-resolution photos or full color scans have to be brought under 10 MB before they'll go out. The goal at this tier isn't to make the file small — it's to clear the attachment gate — so the tool compresses gently and keeps as much sharpness as it can.
The short answer
Yes, and 10 MB is a generous cap — the point here is getting an oversized file small enough to send. compress cat runs entirely in your browser — no upload, free, no signup — and makes a best-effort pass toward 10 MB. At about 10240 KB it's a common attachment limit on Gmail and many upload systems: a high-resolution scan or photo-heavy PDF that started at twenty, thirty, or a hundred megabytes usually drops to 10 MB and sends fine as an attachment — and because the target is so roomy, quality loss tends to be minimal.
Compress your PDF to 10 MB now
Common cases: exam sign-up ≤200KB, visa documents ≤1MB, government portals ≤500KB
This tool usesrasterizationto compress, which is best forscanned / photo-based PDFs. A text-only PDF becomes an image after compression, so youcan no longer copy or search the text — if you need selectable text, don't use this tool on a pure-text document.
10 MB is a common larger cap for Gmail and Outlook attachments and many upload systems — ideal for getting an oversized PDF packed with high-resolution photos or full scans down to something you can send directly as an attachment.
How do I compress a PDF to 10 MB?
Drop the oversized PDF into compress cat, set the target to 10 MB (about 10240 KB), and the tool optimizes the structure and downsamples ultra-high-resolution images as needed, locally, to land near 10 MB. Nothing is uploaded — it all runs in your browser.
10 MB leaves a lot of headroom, so the tool usually only needs light-to-moderate compression to clear the threshold — the text layer stays intact and images show no visible change in normal viewing.
- Drop in PDF → set 10 MB target → download
- In-browser, no upload, free, no signup
- Compressed to send, not to shrink — minimal quality loss
How much quality do you lose at 10 MB?
Usually very little. 10 MB is a roomy target, so for most large files the tool only needs gentle compression to hit it — text stays searchable and images show no obvious degradation on screen or in everyday printing.
Only when the original is extremely large (hundreds of megabytes, a thousand-plus high-res images) does reaching 10 MB involve more visible image downsampling. Even then, the result usually stays clear and presentable — fine to pass around as an email attachment.
Why is 10 MB the target for emailing?
Because mainstream mail providers like Gmail and Outlook cap a message's total attachment size roughly between 10 and 25 MB, and 10 MB is the safest tier that gets through almost everywhere. Cross that line and the email either bounces or gets forced into a cloud-drive link.
Compressing a big PDF to 10 MB lets you send it directly as an attachment — no link to click, no extra download for the recipient. If your provider's limit is higher you can pick a larger target, but 10 MB is the most compatible 'it'll send' default.
Frequently asked questions
Can I still search the text after compressing to 10 MB?
Almost always. 10 MB has ample headroom, so text PDFs don't need rasterizing and keep a full selectable, searchable text layer.
Is 10 MB small enough for a Gmail attachment?
Usually yes. Gmail caps a single attachment around 25 MB, so 10 MB sits comfortably within it, and most other providers accept 10 MB attachments too.
Is my file uploaded to a server?
No. The entire compression runs locally in your browser — nothing is uploaded, it's free, and no account is required.
Updated · compress cat team