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Reduce Image Size to 600 KB

A lot of email platforms and official portals cap their file sizes right at 600KB, especially for things like profile signatures or data uploads. It gives you just enough room to keep a photo looking "crisp." At this size, you can usually keep the resolution at 150 DPI (dots per inch) without breaking a sweat.

This range is super common for newspaper and magazine digital submissions, corporate blog posts, hotel website galleries, and restaurant menu photos. I've seen photographers deliver full client galleries of web previews at exactly 600KB per image — the clients are always happy with how the photos look.

If someone is asking you for a 600KB file, they actually know their stuff—they are looking for that perfect balance of clean quality and fast loading times. Match that energy! You can easily resize image to 600KB or reduce image size in KB using our tool above to hit that sweet spot in just a few seconds..

FAQ About Reduce Image Size to 600 KB

In the Export dialog, go to "File Settings" — set format to JPEG, quality 80. Then under "File Sizing," check "Limit File Size To" and enter 600K. Lightroom handles the rest automatically. It's one of the cleanest ways to hit a specific size.

Absolutely. Gmail, Outlook, and almost every email client support attachments up to 20–25MB. A 600KB image is tiny in email terms. No provider will bounce it for size reasons.

For featured images and article headers, 600KB is reasonable. For in-content images, you might want to go a bit lower (300–400KB). If you're on a shared hosting plan with limited bandwidth, smaller is always better.

For web listings on sites like 99acres or MagicBricks, yes — 600KB is more than enough and often within or near their recommended range. For print brochures, you'd need much higher resolution files.

Check the rules. Many passport systems want exactly 240KB to 300KB. 600KB is sometimes allowed, but you risk the upload failing because it is too big. Always read the "Photo Requirements" page first.