Eziclip.com

Compress Files — One Free Compressor for Video, Images, Audio, GIFs & PDF

Drop any files — video, images, audio, GIFs or PDFs — pick a level, and download them all as one zip. It figures out each file and compresses it in your browser, nothing uploaded.

Drop a file or click to choose

ImageVideoAudioGIFPDF

Drop any files — images, video, audio, GIFs or PDFs. They compress in your browser, then download as one zip.

Eziclip is one free, in-browser compressor for every file type: drop a mix of video, images, audio, GIFs and PDFs at once, pick Strong / Medium / Light, choose an output format per file, compare original vs compressed, and download them all as a single zip. It reads each file and picks the right engine automatically — no need to know which tool to open. Everything runs on your own device — nothing is uploaded, no watermark, no sign-up.

One tool for every file

Most sites make you hunt for the right compressor — one for video, another for images, a third for PDF. Eziclip is a single tool: drop whatever you have, mixed together if you like, and it reads each file and runs the right engine — H.264/VP9 for video, an optimal palette for GIFs, the browser's image encoders for photos, a proper audio encoder for sound, and page-rasterizing for PDFs.

Everything happens in your browser. Drop a folder of mixed files, pick a level, and every one is compressed on your own device, then downloaded together as a single zip — no upload, no watermark, no per-file limit.

Pick a level and a format, see the result first

Three levels cover the common cases — Strong for the smallest files, Medium for the best size-to-quality balance, and Light to keep almost all the detail. Each file kind also gets its own output format: images as JPG/PNG/WebP/AVIF, video as MP4/WebM/MOV, audio as MP3/M4A/OGG/WAV/FLAC, and PDF as a Strong (rasterized) or Light (text-preserving) pass.

Every file shows its before and after size and the percent saved, and a draggable split-screen compare — with the original and compressed kept in sync — lets you check quality before you download. If a file can't be made smaller without loss, you get the original back unchanged rather than a bigger file.

Compress AND convert, in one step

Because you choose the output format per file, the same tool converts as it compresses — turn a MOV into a smaller MP4, a WAV into an MP3, a PNG into a WebP, or keep the format and just shrink it. Lossless targets like WAV, FLAC and PNG are honoured even when they end up larger than a lossy source, because that's a deliberate convert, not a failed compress.

It's the compressor and the converter in one surface, so you don't bounce between tools for what is really the same job: re-encode this file the way I want it.

Nothing uploaded — free, no watermark, no sign-up

Cloud compressors upload every file to a server — a real exposure for private video, client work, IDs or documents. Eziclip never uploads: the whole job runs in your browser using the encoders it already ships, so your files never leave your device and there's nothing for any server to keep.

That's why it's free with no caps — no per-file cost to us because there's no server doing the work, so no file-count limit, no queue, and no watermark. It works on any modern browser, on desktop or phone.

How to compress any file in your browser

  1. 1

    Drop your files

    Any mix of video, images, audio, GIFs or PDFs — drop as many as you like. They stay in your browser; nothing is uploaded.

  2. 2

    Pick a level + format

    Choose Strong, Medium or Light, and an output format for each file kind. Hit 'Compress all' and compare each before/after with the split slider.

  3. 3

    Download the zip

    Download every compressed file as one zip — free, watermark-free, processed entirely on your device.

Questions

Yes — that's the point. Drop video, images, audio, GIFs and PDFs together; the tool reads each one and runs the right engine, then downloads them all as a single zip. You don't have to pick a tool per type.

Both. You pick an output format per file kind, so the same tool converts as it compresses — MOV→MP4, WAV→MP3, PNG→WebP, and so on. Keep the format to just shrink, or change it to convert.

No. Everything runs in your browser using the encoders it already ships — your files never leave your device, and there's nothing for any server to keep or cap.

As many as your device can hold in memory — there's no per-batch limit. They compress one after another and download together as a single zip.

It was already about as small as that level gives, so the tool kept your original rather than re-encode it larger. Try a stronger level, or a different output format if you're converting.