Compress Property Photos for Rightmove, Zoopla and Your Own Site
Rightmove, Zoopla and OnTheMarket all re-compress your photos when you upload them. The same trick that works for Instagram works here: control the compression yourself so the portals don't crush your listings.
Drop images here or click to upload
JPG, PNG, WebP · Up to 10 images · Max 20 MB each
🔒 100% private — your images never leave your browser
Why portal photos look worse than your originals
When you push a 12 MB property photo from your camera into Rightmove, the portal resizes it to display dimensions and re-encodes it with a fixed (fairly aggressive) quality preset. The bigger your input, the harsher the re-compression.
Pre-compressing to a sensible size before upload gives the portal less work to do, and the displayed result on the listing is noticeably sharper.
Recommended specs in 2026
- Rightmove: 1024–2048 px on longest side, under 2 MB per image, JPEG.
- Zoopla: similar — keep under 2 MB and at least 1024 px wide.
- OnTheMarket: under 5 MB cap but smaller is better.
- Your own agency website: 1600 px wide, ~250 KB each, WebP if possible.
A quick workflow for an entire listing
- Export all photos from your camera or editing app at 2048 px wide, 100% JPEG quality.
- Drop the whole set (10 at a time) into the compressor on our homepage.
- Use 80% quality — visibly identical, dramatically smaller.
- Download as ZIP and upload to the portal in one go.
Floor plans and EPCs
Floor plans and EPC certificates are typically PDFs or PNGs. The same compressor handles PNGs — drop them in alongside the photos. Floor plans usually shrink by 60–80% with no visible loss of line sharpness.
Frequently asked questions
Will compression make my listing photos look amateur?
No — the goal is to look better on the portal, not worse. At 80% JPEG quality the photos are visually identical to the original but survive portal re-compression more cleanly.
What about virtual tour stills?
Treat them like normal photos. Compress before uploading to Matterport, EyeSpy360 or your own gallery.
Should I watermark before or after compressing?
Watermark first, then compress. Compression after watermarking ensures the watermark stays sharp.
Ready to shrink your own images?
Free, private, runs in your browser. No signup, no limits.
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