Use case

How to Compress PDF to Under 5MB

Practical workflow to reduce a PDF below 5MB for strict upload limits while keeping forms, signatures, and key text readable.

Implementation guidance

A 5MB limit is common in government forms, applicant tracking systems, and court filing pre-checkers. The challenge is balancing size with readability, especially when the file contains scanned pages, photos, or mixed-language text.

For tight limits, combine multiple steps. First remove unused pages, then compress to a target size, and finally verify that signatures, stamps, and low-contrast text are still legible. This sequence usually performs better than a single aggressive compression pass.

Use FoxyPDF tools in order: Remove Pages if needed, then Compress For Email with a 5MB target, and optionally OCR scanned files before final submission.

Step-by-step workflow

4 steps
  1. 1Remove unnecessary pages or duplicate sections if present.
  2. 2Upload the cleaned file to Compress For Email.
  3. 3Set target size to 5 MB and process.
  4. 4Review small text, stamps, and signatures before upload.

FAQ

Can I compress a scanned PDF to under 5MB and keep it readable?

Yes, but scanned files are image-heavy. Use target compression and validate key text after processing.

What is the safest profile for strict file-size limits?

Target-based compression is best. It gives you predictable output size and avoids random over-compression.

Do signatures break after compression?

Visual signatures usually remain intact, but always check stamp visibility and fine details before sending.

Should I use OCR before or after compression?

For scanned files, OCR first can help preserve searchable text behavior while still allowing size reduction.

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