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Compress PDF to 200 KB

Fit your resume, certificates, and supporting documents under job portal and admission system limits. Drop your PDF — the 200 KB target is preselected and everything runs in your browser.

The 200 KB limit: where careers and admissions meet a file size cap

200 KB is the signature limit of application systems: corporate job portals, university admission platforms, scholarship forms, and professional registration bodies. The documents involved — resumes, degree certificates, transcripts, recommendation letters — are usually scans, and a single scanned page from a phone or office scanner runs 1 to 5 MB. That's 5 to 25 times over the cap, which is why the upload fails and why "reduce quality and re-scan" advice wastes your time.

LuraPDF solves the actual problem: it compresses to the number. Sample pages from your document are analyzed, the tool searches for the lightest compression that fits under 200 KB, and the output lands slightly below the cap so the portal accepts it on the first try. A before/after comparison confirms your certificate's seal and your transcript's grades are still crisp. And the whole pipeline runs in your browser — your career documents are processed by your own device, not someone's server.

How to compress a PDF to 200 KB

1

Upload your PDF

Drop your resume, certificate, or transcript into the box above. The file stays in browser memory — nothing is uploaded while you work.

2

The 200 KB target is preset

The editor opens in Target size mode with 200 KB selected. Before compressing, it shows the smallest size your document can reach, so there are no surprises.

3

Verify the details

Use the before/after slider to check the parts that matter: grades on transcripts, seals and signatures on certificates, contact details on resumes. Everything should read clearly at normal zoom.

4

Download and submit

The compressed file downloads automatically at just under 200 KB. Upload it to the portal and move on to the next form field.

Lands under 200 KB in one run

The tool searches compression settings against your actual document and delivers a file that clears the cap — no repeated guessing with quality sliders.

Your documents stay yours

Resumes and certificates carry your full identity. LuraPDF compresses them in your browser — no upload, no server-side processing, no copies anywhere.

Check before you apply

A blurry transcript can cost an interview. The before/after slider shows exactly what the reviewer will see, page by page, before you submit.

Free for every application

Application season means dozens of uploads. No daily quota, no account, no watermark — compress every document for every portal, free.

Where the 200 KB limit shows up

Application systems are the home of the 200 KB cap. These are the most common scenarios.

Job application portals

Workday, Taleo, SuccessFactors, and government job boards routinely cap resume and document uploads at 200 KB. Compress once and reuse the file across every application.

University admissions

Admission platforms ask for transcripts, statements, and certificates — each under a per-file cap. Keep grades and seals legible while fitting the limit.

Scholarship and grant forms

Funding applications bundle income proofs, recommendation letters, and ID documents with strict size limits. Get each file under the cap without re-scanning.

Professional registrations

Licensing bodies for nursing, engineering, accounting, and teaching require certified document uploads — typically 200 KB to 500 KB per file.

Compressing a PDF to 200 KB — FAQ

Can I get my resume under 200 KB without it looking worse?
Almost always. A resume exported from Word or Google Docs is text-based and often already under 200 KB — if yours is over, it's usually embedded photos or a scanned version. LuraPDF finds the lightest compression that fits, so a 1–2 page document typically lands under the cap with no visible quality change at reading zoom.
Will a scanned certificate stay readable at 200 KB?
A 1–3 page scan compresses to 200 KB with clearly readable text in nearly all cases — 200 KB is a far more forgiving budget than the 100 KB caps on visa portals. Verify the seal and signature areas with the before/after slider; if your scan is many pages long, the tool tells you the smallest achievable size before you start.
Is it safe to compress my resume and certificates online?
With LuraPDF, yes — the compression runs entirely in your browser. Your documents are never uploaded, stored, or logged. Most other online compressors process files on their servers, which means your full name, address, education history, and signatures pass through third-party infrastructure.
The portal says 200 KB but still rejects my 199 KB file — why?
Some systems measure size in different units (200,000 bytes vs 204,800 bytes) or add their own metadata before checking. LuraPDF already aims about 5% under the target to absorb this. If a portal is still stricter, set a custom target of 180 KB in the editor and re-compress.
Will the text in my PDF still be selectable?
No — hitting a byte target requires re-rendering pages as optimized images, which makes text non-selectable. Application reviewers read documents visually, so this doesn't affect your application. If you need selectable text, use the main Compress PDF tool's Keep text mode instead.
Can I compress multiple documents at once?
Currently one file at a time — run your documents back to back; the editor resets between files without a page reload. If a portal wants several certificates as one file, use Merge PDF first, then compress the merged document to 200 KB.

Get your PDF under 200 KB now

Drop your PDF above — the 200 KB target is already selected. Compression runs on your own device, the result lands just under the cap, and the before/after view confirms it still looks professional. No signup, no quota, no watermark. Need a different limit? The Compress PDF editor takes any custom target.