How to Compress an Excel-to-PDF File – Reduce Size After Conversion
This page solves a specific problem: a PDF exported from Excel is much larger than expected. It covers the upstream fix (compressing images and adjusting settings before converting in Excel) and the downstream fix (compressing the output PDF with a free tool). Both strategies are presented with exact steps, and the page explains why Excel PDFs are often larger than equivalent Word PDFs.
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H2-1: Why Excel PDFs Are So Large
PDFs exported from Excel are often 3–10 times larger than expected because of how Excel handles embedded content:
| Cause | Typical Size Contribution | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| Embedded charts at 300 DPI | 2–10MB per workbook | Excel renders charts as high-resolution raster images in the PDF |
| Full-resolution images in cells | 1–5MB per image | Photos inserted into Excel cells are embedded at original resolution |
| Header/footer graphics | 0.5–1MB | Company logos in headers are embedded as high-res images |
| Large print area with many rows | 1–3MB | Dense spreadsheet grids create complex vector paths |
| Embedded fonts (full files) | 0.5–2MB | Excel embeds complete font files rather than subsetting by default |
A typical 500KB Excel file can produce a 15–30MB PDF if it contains several charts and a company logo in the header. The fix is to address these sources of bloat before or after conversion.
H2-2: Fix Before Converting — Reduce Size in Excel First
Reducing size before the PDF conversion produces better results than compressing the output PDF, because image compression at the source preserves more of the original data structure.
Step 1: Compress all pictures in the workbook
- Click on any image or chart in the Excel file
- Go to the "Picture Format" tab in the ribbon (or "Format" tab for charts)
- Click "Compress Pictures" (in the Adjust group)
- In the dialog:
- Uncheck "Apply only to this picture" (to compress all images)
- Select "Email (96 ppi)" for maximum compression
- Check "Delete cropped areas of pictures"
- Click OK
Step 2: Remove unnecessary chart data For charts linked to large data ranges, right-click the chart → "Select Data" → reduce the data range to only the rows/columns plotted. Excess data embedded in the chart increases the PDF size.
Step 3: Save as PDF with minimum size setting
- Go to File → Save As → PDF
- Click "Options…"
- In the "PDF Options" dialog, select "Minimum size (publishing online)" if available
- Alternatively, uncheck "ISO 19005-1 compliant (PDF/A)" — PDF/A compliance forces font embedding that increases file size
Expected result: An Excel file with 5 charts and a logo, previously producing a 20MB PDF, typically produces a 3–5MB PDF after these steps.
H2-3: Fix After Converting — Compress the Output PDF
If you have already converted to PDF or cannot modify the source Excel file:
- Go to PDF Agile.org or ilovepdf.com/compress_pdf
- Upload the Excel-generated PDF
- Select High compression (96 DPI)
- Download the compressed result
Typical results for Excel PDFs (High compression):
| Excel PDF Size | Compressed Output | Reduction |
|---|---|---|
| 25 MB (charts + images) | 4–6 MB | ~77% |
| 15 MB (charts, no photos) | 3–4 MB | ~75% |
| 5 MB (dense data, no images) | 3–3.5 MB | ~33% |
| 2 MB (text + small charts) | 1.2–1.6 MB | ~25% |
Note: text-heavy spreadsheets and data tables compress less than chart-heavy workbooks because the vector text has little redundancy to remove.
H2-4: Excel vs Word PDF Export — Why Excel PDFs Are Larger
Under identical content types, Excel PDFs are consistently larger than Word PDFs:
| Document Type | Source File | PDF Output (no compression) |
|---|---|---|
| 10-page Word report (text + 5 images) | 3 MB | 4 MB |
| 10-sheet Excel workbook (text + 5 charts) | 2 MB | 18 MB |
The reason: Excel’s PDF export engine renders charts as high-resolution PNG/TIFF images rather than vector graphics. Word preserves charts and diagrams as vector paths in the PDF. This is a known limitation of Excel’s PDF exporter. The fix-before-converting steps in H2-2 address this directly.
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Compress Your Excel PDF Now — FreeFrequently Asked Questions
Compress all pictures in Excel (select any image → Picture Format → Compress Pictures → Email 96 ppi → apply to all images). Then save as PDF using "Minimum size" option. This reduces most Excel PDFs by 60–80% compared to the default export.
Excel renders charts as high-resolution raster images when exporting to PDF. A workbook with 10 charts can produce a 30–60MB PDF even from a small source file. Compress pictures in Excel before exporting (Picture Format → Compress Pictures → 96 ppi).
Combine both approaches: (1) compress pictures in Excel to 96 ppi before converting, then (2) apply High compression (96 DPI) to the output PDF using PDF Agile (Offline Desktop). For a typical 5-chart workbook, this combination achieves a final size of 500KB–1.2MB.