How to Compress a PDF to 100KB or Less – Step-by-Step Guide

This page addresses one of the most searched and most difficult PDF compression tasks: getting a file below 100KB. It names the specific government portals and educational systems that enforce this limit, explains why 100KB is near the floor for most PDFs, and provides two strategies — direct compression for text-only single pages and a split-then-compress approach for multi-page or image documents.

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H2-1: Government Portals That Require Small PDFs

The 100–300KB range is enforced by government and educational portals primarily in South Asia:

PortalCountryMax PDF SizeDocument Type
SSC CGL / SSC CHSL application portalIndia100–300KBPhoto + signature scan
IBPS Bank PO applicationIndia300KBPhoto + signature
UPSC civil services portalIndia300KBDocument uploads
RRB (Railway Recruitment Board)India100–500KBPhoto + certificate scans
NDA / CDS applicationIndia100KB (photo)Passport-size photo PDF
Bangladesh PSC (BPSC)Bangladesh200KBApplication documents
Nepal PSCNepal200KBApplication documents
Pakistan FPSCPakistan200–500KBDocument scans
University of Delhi portalIndia200KBAdmission documents

Most of these portals require a scanned photo and signature as separate PDFs, each under 100–300KB. The challenge is that a passport-size photo scanned at 200 DPI produces a file of approximately 150–400KB before compression.


H2-2: Strategy 1 — Direct Compression (Text-Only PDFs)

If your PDF contains only text (no photos, no scanned images), direct extreme compression can reach 100KB.

Will it work for your file? Check first:

Steps for direct compression:

  1. Go to PDF Agile.org → Compress PDF
  2. Upload your PDF
  3. Select "Screen" quality (72 DPI, maximum compression)
  4. Download and check the file size
  5. If still above 100KB with a single page, the page contains images — switch to Strategy 2

Expected results for text-only PDFs:

PagesOriginal SizeExtreme Compressed
1 page (text only)200–400KB40–80KB
2 pages (text only)400–800KB80–160KB
1 page (text + small logo)300–600KB80–150KB

H2-3: Strategy 2 — Split and Compress (Image or Multi-Page PDFs)

For PDFs with scanned images (passport photos, certificate scans), direct compression alone cannot reach 100KB because the image data has a minimum size floor.

Step 1: Split to single page

  1. Go to ilovepdf.com/split_pdf or https://software-down.pdfagile.com/PDFAgile.1501.exe
  2. Upload the PDF and split to individual pages
  3. Download the single page you need to submit

Step 2: Compress the single page

  1. Upload the single-page PDF to a compressor
  2. Select Extreme / Screen (72 DPI) compression
  3. Check output size

Step 3: If still above 100KB — resize the source image

  1. Open the original photo/scan in any image editor (Paint, Preview, or online)
  2. Resize to maximum 800 × 600 pixels
  3. Save as JPEG at 70–80% quality (this alone produces a 30–70KB file)
  4. Convert the resized JPEG to a single-page PDF using PDF Agile or iLovePDF

A 800×600px JPEG at 80% quality embedded in a single-page PDF = typically 50–80KB, well under 100KB.


H2-4: Why Some PDFs Cannot Reach 100KB

Certain PDFs cannot be compressed below 100KB regardless of settings:

1. Multi-page PDFs: Even a single page of scanned text at 72 DPI is 60–150KB. A 10-page document cannot reach 100KB total — split to one page before compressing.

2. Colour photo scans: A scanned colour photograph at 72 DPI still contains 24-bit colour data for thousands of pixels. Minimum achievable size for a colour photo page: ~60–120KB.

3. High-detail technical drawings: Engineering drawings with fine lines and text detail do not compress well — reducing resolution makes them illegible.

4. PDFs with embedded ICC colour profiles: Colour profiles add 1–3MB. Use Adobe Acrobat to remove embedded profiles (File → Save as Other → Optimized PDF → uncheck Embed color profiles).

Practical advice: If the portal accepts JPG in addition to PDF, submit the image directly. A 800×600 JPEG at 80% quality = 40–70KB, guaranteed under any portal limit.


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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I compress a PDF to 100KB for SSC CGL application?

For the SSC portal’s photo and signature requirement: (1) scan your photo at 200 DPI, (2) save as JPEG at 80% quality, (3) resize to max 600×600 pixels, (4) convert to PDF using PDF Agile. The result is typically 30–70KB. For documents (certificates), split to one page and apply extreme compression via PDF Agile.

Can I compress a PDF to 50KB?

For a single-page text-only PDF, yes — extreme compression typically reaches 40–80KB. For any PDF containing images, 50KB is usually not achievable without severe quality degradation. The practical minimum for a readable image page is approximately 60–100KB at 72 DPI.

How do I compress a scanned PDF to under 200KB?

Split to a single page, then apply extreme compression (72 DPI). A single scanned page at 72 DPI typically outputs at 80–180KB depending on image complexity. For the original scan, use a maximum of 150 DPI when scanning — scanning at 300 DPI creates unnecessarily large files that compress less efficiently.

Why does the portal say my compressed PDF is still too large?

Most portals measure file size in KB, not MB. Verify the file size in your OS before uploading: Windows → right-click → Properties → Size (not "Size on disk"). Some portals also reject PDFs with password protection or form fields — ensure the PDF is a flat, unencrypted file.