TIFF Compressor Online 

Shrink large TIFF files for easier sharing, email, storage, and upload. Compress the image, resize dimensions if needed, or convert to JPG, PNG, or WebP when the destination does not need TIFF.

When should you compress a TIFF file?

TIFF is useful for high-quality scans, prints, and archive workflows, but the files can be much larger than JPG or WebP.

Scanned documents:
Reduce TIFF scans before email or upload while keeping text and details readable.
Photo and print workflows:
Compress or resize large TIFF images when you need easier sharing but still want a higher-quality source than a typical JPG.
Format conversion:
If a website does not accept TIFF, use TIFF to JPG or TIFF to PNG after preparing the file.

How to compress a TIFF file

1. Upload the TIFF:
Upload the TIFF: icon
Select a TIFF or TIF file from your device. Large scan and print files are supported.
2. Choose Compression Settings:
Choose Compression Settings: icon
Use automatic compression, resize dimensions, or set a target file size depending on your upload or sharing requirement.
3. Download the Smaller File:
Download the Smaller File: icon
Process the image and download the compressed TIFF or export to another format if needed.

Why use this TIFF compressor?

Handles Large Source Files:

TIFF files from scanners and design tools can be heavy. Compress or resize them before sharing.

Resize and Convert Options:

Use the same workflow to reduce dimensions or convert TIFF to a more upload-friendly format.

Private Browser Processing:

Your TIFF files are processed locally, useful for scans, documents, and client images.


TIFF Compressor FAQ

TIFF files often store high-quality image data with little or no compression, which is useful for scanning and print workflows but creates large files.

Some TIFF workflows support lossless compression, but major size reduction may require resizing, format conversion, or lossy compression.

Use JPG when you need a smaller photo file for email or upload. Keep TIFF if you need an archival or print-quality source.

Yes. For scans, check that text remains readable after compression before submitting or sharing the file.

Yes. TIFF and TIF are commonly used extensions for the same image format family.

Yes. Use resize controls to reduce width and height when file-size compression alone is not enough.

No. Processing runs locally in your browser.