How To Decrease The Size Of A PDF?

Use an online PDF compressor (upload, compress, download)

Open the PDF in Adobe Acrobat, then use Save As Other → Reduced Size PDF

In Adobe Acrobat, use File → Save As → Optimized PDF, then reduce image quality and resolution

Reduce image resolution to 150–300 DPI in the PDF optimization settings

Downsample images to a lower resolution (especially for scanned PDFs)

Convert color images to grayscale (if acceptable) to reduce file size

Remove embedded fonts (if the tool provides this option) and re-embed only necessary fonts

Remove unused objects and metadata (use “Remove hidden information” / “Sanitize” options)

Flatten transparency (if applicable) to reduce complexity

Reduce or remove bookmarks, comments, and attachments

Delete unnecessary pages, then re-export the PDF

Recreate the PDF from the source (print to PDF) using “smallest file size” or low-quality settings

Use “Print to PDF” with a low/medium quality setting (Windows: Microsoft Print to PDF; macOS: Save as PDF with reduced quality)

For scanned documents, run OCR and then save as a “text + image” PDF with optimized settings

Use a PDF optimizer tool (e.g., Ghostscript-based workflows) to downsample and remove metadata

Use qpdf/gs to linearize or optimize structure when supported by your workflow

If the PDF was generated from images, resave source images at lower resolution before exporting to PDF

Batch-compress multiple PDFs using a desktop or command-line compressor

If the PDF contains large vector graphics, simplify or re-export those elements at lower complexity

Export from the original application with “low” or “minimum size” PDF preset (when available)

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