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Compress PDF to 500 KB

Fit multi-page contracts, claims, and filings under submission system limits. Drop your PDF — the 500 KB target is preselected and compression runs entirely in your browser.

500 KB: the working limit for documents that matter

The 500 KB cap appears where multi-page documents meet formal submission systems: court e-filing platforms, government tender portals, insurance claim uploads, and procurement systems. Unlike the punishing 100 KB limits of visa portals, 500 KB is a realistic budget — enough for a 5 to 15 page scanned document with clearly readable text — but a raw scan of the same document is still 5 to 20 MB, an order of magnitude over.

LuraPDF compresses to the number directly: it samples pages from your document, searches for the lightest compression whose output fits under 500 KB, and delivers a file just below the cap so the submission clears on the first attempt. Because filings and claims are exactly the documents that shouldn't pass through third-party servers, the entire pipeline runs in your browser — the contract never leaves your machine. A before/after comparison lets you confirm clause numbers, stamps, and signatures survived before you file.

How to compress a PDF to 500 KB

1

Upload your PDF

Drop your filing, claim, or contract into the box above. The document is read into browser memory only — no upload, no server-side copy.

2

The 500 KB target is preset

The editor opens in Target size mode with 500 KB selected. It immediately shows the smallest achievable size for your document — useful for judging whether a long filing needs splitting first.

3

Verify stamps and signatures

Use the before/after slider to check what matters in formal documents: notary stamps, signatures, exhibit numbers, and fine print should all read clearly at normal zoom.

4

Download and file

The compressed PDF downloads automatically at just under 500 KB. Submit it to the e-filing system or portal — the safety margin clears hard caps measured in either bytes or kilobytes.

Built for multi-page documents

500 KB across 10 pages is a different problem than 100 KB across one. The tool distributes the byte budget evenly and keeps every page readable.

No server sees your filing

Legal and financial documents are confidential by definition. Compression runs 100% in your browser — no upload, no retention, no third party.

Page-by-page verification

Step through every page in the before/after view. For a court filing or claim, checking page 7's stamp is as important as page 1's title.

Honest feasibility check

A 50-page filing may not fit 500 KB readably. The tool shows the smallest achievable size up front so you can split the document instead of submitting mush.

Where the 500 KB limit applies

Formal submission systems built around multi-page documents are where 500 KB caps live.

Court e-filing systems

Electronic filing platforms cap per-document sizes — commonly 500 KB to a few MB. Compress exhibits and supporting documents so the filing uploads without splitting errors.

Tenders and procurement

Bid portals demand company registrations, financial statements, and compliance certificates under strict per-file caps, often with a same-day deadline.

Insurance claims

Claim portals accept scanned invoices, reports, and assessments with per-file limits. Compress the evidence pack so the claim goes through in one session.

Property and registration documents

Land registries and municipal systems take deeds, surveys, and agreements as uploads — multi-page scans that need compression to fit.

Compressing a PDF to 500 KB — FAQ

How many pages can fit readably in 500 KB?
As a rule of thumb: 5 to 15 scanned pages compress to 500 KB with clearly readable text; text-heavy digital PDFs can fit far more. Beyond roughly 20 scanned pages, per-page quality starts to drop noticeably. LuraPDF shows the smallest achievable size before you compress — if it's well above 500 KB, split the document with Split PDF and compress the parts separately.
Will stamps and signatures stay sharp?
At 500 KB across a typical filing, yes — this budget allows moderate compression that preserves stamps, seals, and signatures at readable quality. Verify them with the before/after slider, especially on pages with fine print or low-contrast ink.
Is it safe to compress legal documents online?
With LuraPDF, the document never goes online — compression runs in your browser, on your machine, with no upload and no copies. That distinction matters for filings under confidentiality obligations: most online compressors process files server-side, which can itself raise disclosure questions.
The e-filing system also requires searchable text — what then?
Target-size compression re-renders pages as images, so the text layer is lost. If your system requires searchable PDFs, compress to 500 KB first, then run the OCR PDF tool on the result to add a fresh text layer — or use the main Compress PDF tool's Keep text mode if the size requirement is loose enough.
Why is my output 470 KB instead of exactly 500 KB?
LuraPDF deliberately aims about 5% under the cap. Submission systems measure limits inconsistently — 500,000 bytes vs 512,000 bytes vs post-upload re-encoding — and a file sitting exactly at the limit risks rejection. The margin guarantees the upload clears.
Can I combine several documents and compress them together?
Yes — use Merge PDF to combine exhibits or attachments into one document first, then compress the merged file to 500 KB. If the merged document is too long to fit readably, the feasibility estimate will tell you before you waste a filing attempt.

Get your PDF under 500 KB now

Drop your PDF above — the 500 KB target is already selected. The document is compressed on your own device, lands just under the cap, and the page-by-page comparison confirms every stamp and signature survived. No signup, no quota, no watermark. Need another limit? The Compress PDF editor accepts any custom target.