FlowVidFlowVid.

PDF tool

Convert JPG to PDF Under 200KB — Free

Turn one or more photos into a single PDF that is guaranteed to be under 200KB. Upload forms that cap PDF size reject anything over the limit, so this tool compresses your images to the highest quality that still fits — you upload once and it goes through. Everything runs in your browser and nothing is stored.

images → PDFnothing stored

Drop your images here

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accepts: JPG, PNG, WebP (multiple)

How to jpg to pdf under 200kb

  1. Add one or more images (JPG, PNG or WebP).
  2. Each image becomes an A4 page, compressed to the highest quality that keeps the whole PDF under 200KB.
  3. Check the final file size on the result card.
  4. Download your under-200KB PDF — ready to upload.

What you can use it for

  • Upload marksheets or certificates capped at 200KB
  • Convert phone scans to portal-ready PDFs
  • Combine front and back of an ID into one small PDF
  • Fix a "file size exceeds limit" rejection

Why use FlowVid Tools

  • Private by default — we never store your images. They're discarded the moment you're done.
  • Completely free with no watermark and no sign-up required.
  • Fast — drop your image, get the result in seconds. No queues, no waiting.

Supported formats

This tool accepts JPG, PNG, WebP (multiple) as input and gives you a PDF under 200KB as output. Files are processed in seconds and never stored — we keep nothing once you have your result.

Where a 200KB PDF limit shows up

200KB is one of the most common PDF caps on Indian exam and government portals — marksheets, category certificates and ID proofs are frequently capped at "200 KB in PDF format". The same portals usually cap photos at 20–50KB, so the document cap feels generous by comparison but still rejects most phone scans.

A phone photo of an A4 page is typically 2–4MB, so it needs a 10–20× reduction — exactly what this tool automates without letting the page turn blocky.

How the tool stays under 200KB without ruining quality

A PDF's size is almost entirely the images inside it, and image size is controlled by two levers: JPEG quality and resolution. This tool never pushes quality below the level where JPEG compression turns blocky. If the 200KB budget is too tight at full resolution, it reduces the image resolution step by step instead — a slightly soft page reads fine on screen and in print, while a blocky one looks broken.

That is the same approach our exam-photo tools use, and it matters most for multi-page PDFs: the byte budget is shared across every page, so the tool finds the single quality level that fits all pages under 200KB together.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Yes. The tool measures the finished PDF — not just the images inside it — and keeps re-encoding until the complete file is below 200KB (using decimal kilobytes, the convention upload forms use). The size shown on the result card is the exact size of the file you download.

Yes. Add several images and each becomes its own A4 page in a single PDF, and the whole document is still kept under 200KB. With many pages under a tight cap, each page is compressed a little more, so the images go slightly softer rather than blocky.

Yes — the tool accepts JPG, PNG and WebP, so "photo to PDF 200KB" and "JPG to PDF under 200KB" both work the same way. Images are placed on white A4 pages and compressed to fit the 200KB cap.

No — that's the point of this tool. Adding a pre-compressed image works fine, but you can add the original photo straight from your phone and the compression happens as part of building the PDF, in one step.

No. We never store, share or look at your images — every file is discarded the moment processing finishes and nothing is saved. That makes it safe even for sensitive documents like passports, ID cards and bank statements.

Yes. There is no cost, no watermark and no account needed. Anonymous users get a generous daily limit, which is plenty for everyday use.
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