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Compress PDF to 1 MB

The everyday limit — email policies, learning platforms, CMS uploads, contact forms. Drop your PDF and get it under 1 MB with quality to spare, entirely in your browser.

1 MB: the everyday ceiling for sharing documents

1 MB is the most common practical limit in daily work. Corporate email policies flag attachments above it, learning management systems like Moodle and Canvas default to per-file caps around it, website contact forms and CMS media libraries enforce it, and helpdesk ticket systems reject anything bigger. The files that trip over it are ordinary: a scanned signed contract, a phone-photographed receipt converted to PDF, a slide deck with embedded images.

The good news: 1 MB is a generous budget. Most documents under 30 pages compress to it with quality that's indistinguishable at reading zoom. LuraPDF makes the process exact — it samples your document, finds the lightest compression that fits under 1 MB, and aims slightly below the cap so the upload or attachment clears first try. Everything runs in your browser with no server involved, and a before/after slider lets you confirm the result looks right before you hit send.

How to compress a PDF to 1 MB

1

Upload your PDF

Drop your document into the box above. It loads into browser memory only — your file is never sent to a server, no matter how large it is.

2

The 1 MB target is preset

The editor opens in Target size mode with 1 MB selected. You'll see the smallest achievable size immediately — for most documents, well under the target, meaning minimal quality loss.

3

Glance at the comparison

The before/after slider shows original and compressed pages side by side. At a 1 MB budget the difference is usually invisible, but thirty seconds of checking beats a bounced email.

4

Download and send

The compressed PDF downloads automatically at just under 1 MB. Attach it, upload it to the LMS, or drop it into the CMS — it fits.

Quality to spare

1 MB is roomy. The tool uses the lightest compression that fits, so most documents come out looking identical at reading zoom — just 5 to 20 times smaller.

Browser-only, always

Contracts, invoices, and coursework are compressed on your own device. Nothing uploads, nothing is stored, nothing is logged.

See it before you send it

The before/after slider previews exactly what your recipient, professor, or customer will open. No surprises after the email is sent.

Free without limits

No account, no daily cap, no watermark. Compress every attachment, every upload, every day — from any modern browser.

Where the 1 MB limit shows up

The 1 MB cap is everywhere ordinary documents get shared. These are the most common cases.

Email attachment policies

Corporate mail gateways and ticketing systems often cap or flag attachments above 1 MB — well below Gmail's 25 MB. Compress the scan and skip the cloud-link workaround.

Learning platforms

Moodle, Canvas, Blackboard, and school portals enforce per-file limits on assignment uploads. Get the essay scan or lab report under the cap minutes before the deadline.

Website and CMS uploads

Media libraries, contact forms, and application widgets reject big PDFs. A compressed brochure also loads faster for every visitor who downloads it.

Messaging and mobile sharing

Large PDFs fail or crawl over WhatsApp, Teams, and Slack on mobile connections. A sub-1 MB file sends instantly and opens fast on any phone.

Compressing a PDF to 1 MB — FAQ

Will my PDF lose quality going under 1 MB?
Usually not noticeably. 1 MB is a comfortable budget for documents up to roughly 30 scanned pages, and LuraPDF applies only as much compression as the target requires — a 3 MB file gets a much lighter touch than a 30 MB one. The before/after slider shows you exactly what changed.
My PDF is 50 MB of scanned pages — can it reach 1 MB?
Often yes, if it's under about 30 pages — scans compress dramatically because each page is one large photo. For very long documents the tool shows the smallest achievable size up front; if that's above 1 MB, split the file with Split PDF or send it in parts.
Is this safe for confidential work documents?
Yes. Compression runs entirely in your browser — the PDF is never uploaded, processed remotely, or stored. That's a structural difference from most online compressors, which handle your file on their servers. Close the tab and no trace remains.
Why target 1 MB instead of just using a quality preset?
Presets answer "how much quality do I keep?"; a target answers "will the upload be accepted?". When a system enforces 1 MB, the target mode guarantees the answer is yes — it lands the file just under the cap with the best quality that fits, instead of you guessing between Balanced and Smallest.
Does compression keep the text selectable?
Target mode re-renders pages as optimized images, so text selection and search are lost. For email and uploads this rarely matters, but if it does, use the main Compress PDF tool's Keep text mode — its lossless savings are often enough to get a digital (non-scanned) PDF under 1 MB on its own.
Can I compress several PDFs to 1 MB each?
One at a time for now — the editor resets between files, so running five documents back to back takes about a minute. To send several documents as one attachment, Merge PDF first and then compress the combined file.

Get your PDF under 1 MB now

Drop your PDF above — the 1 MB target is already selected. Compression runs on your own device, the result lands just under the cap with quality to spare, and the before/after view proves it. No signup, no quota, no watermark. Different limit? The Compress PDF editor takes any custom target.