Compress PDF files directly in your browser and create smaller documents for uploads, email sharing, and storage. This working Tool Radar 360 Compress PDF tool is especially useful for scanned and image-heavy PDFs where large file sizes slow down everyday workflows.
Upload a PDF, choose compression level and render detail, generate a smaller PDF, preview the result, and download the compressed file.
Drag and drop one PDF file here, or use the upload field below. Then choose your compression level and output detail settings.
Follow these simple steps to reduce PDF file size in your browser.
Select the PDF file you want to compress for sharing, uploads, or storage.
Select light, balanced, or strong compression and adjust render detail if needed.
Create the smaller PDF, preview the result, and download the compressed file.
This tool helps users create smaller PDF files for easier sharing, faster uploads, and more practical storage.
Create a smaller PDF that is easier to upload to portals, forms, and document systems.
Smaller PDFs are easier to email and distribute across teams, clients, and workflows.
This browser-side method works especially well when large PDFs are built from images or scans.
The Compress PDF tool helps users reduce the size of PDF documents through a practical browser-based workflow. This is useful when files are too large for uploads, difficult to email, or taking more storage space than necessary.
Many users compress PDF files before uploading reports, forms, scanned documents, or visual PDFs to online portals and email attachments. A smaller file can be faster to send, easier to store, and more practical for daily work.
Tool Radar 360 provides a cleaner compression workflow so users can upload a PDF, choose a compression level, preview the result, and download a smaller document from one page.
Use this tool whenever a PDF file is too large for email, uploads, storage, or quick sharing, especially if the document contains scanned pages or image-heavy content.
Here are quick answers about compressing PDF files online.
Yes. This version uses a real browser-side compression workflow that rebuilds the PDF into a smaller output file.
Scanned PDFs and image-heavy documents usually compress best with this browser-based approach.
Yes, stronger compression can reduce visual quality. Balanced mode is usually the safest choice for everyday use.
Continue into related PDF workflows after reducing file size.
Upload one PDF, choose your compression level, preview the smaller result, and download the compressed file from one clean workflow.