8 Best TinyPNG Alternatives in 2026 (Free and Paid)

Looking for TinyPNG alternatives? We compare Pikkx, Squoosh, ShortPixel, ImageOptim and more — with honest pros and cons for each.

Cristian Peña5 min read
TinyPNGAlternativesToolsComparison

Why look for alternatives?

TinyPNG is a solid tool — it's been compressing images since 2012 and it does the job well. But it has real limitations that push people to look elsewhere:

Privacy. Your images are uploaded to TinyPNG's servers. For client work, proprietary designs, or personal photos, that's a non-starter for many people. According to Google's research, optimized images are essential for good performance.

Free tier limits. The web tool allows 20 images at up to 5MB each. The API gives 500 free compressions per month. If you need more, pricing starts at $39/year.

No format conversion. TinyPNG compresses images but can't convert JPEG to WebP or resize images. You need separate tools for those tasks.

No resizing. You can't resize images while compressing — it's compression only.

Let's look at what else is available in 2026.

The alternatives

1. Pikkx — Best for privacy + batch processing

Type: Web app, client-side Free tier: 10 images per batch, unlimited batches Formats: JPEG, PNG, WebP (with conversion) Extras: Resize, format conversion, quality control

Pikkx processes everything in your browser using WebAssembly. Images never leave your device. Unlike Squoosh (which handles one image at a time), Pikkx supports batch processing — drop up to 10 images and compress, resize, and convert them all at once.

Why choose over TinyPNG: Privacy, format conversion, resizing, all in one tool. Tradeoff: Smaller batch size (10 vs 20).

2. Squoosh — Best for fine-tuned control

Type: Web app, client-side Free tier: Unlimited (1 image at a time) Formats: JPEG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, JPEG-XL Extras: Side-by-side preview, granular codec settings

Squoosh is Google's open-source image compressor. It gives you more control over compression than any other web tool — you can tweak every parameter of every codec. The split-view comparison is excellent for finding the right quality/size balance.

Why choose over TinyPNG: More formats (AVIF, JPEG-XL), better control, privacy. Tradeoff: No batch processing — one image at a time.

3. ShortPixel — Best for WordPress

Type: Web app + WordPress plugin, server-side Free tier: 50 images on web tool, 100/month on API Formats: JPEG, PNG, GIF, WebP, AVIF, PDF Extras: Three compression modes, bulk optimization, PDF support

ShortPixel consistently produces excellent compression ratios. Its WordPress plugin automatically optimizes images on upload and can bulk-process your entire media library. The three modes (lossy, glossy, lossless) give you control without overwhelming you with settings.

Why choose over TinyPNG: Better WordPress integration, more formats, PDF support. Tradeoff: Server-side processing (images are uploaded).

4. ImageOptim — Best for Mac users

Type: macOS desktop app Free tier: Unlimited Formats: PNG, JPEG, GIF Extras: Multiple compression engines, metadata removal, lossless by default

ImageOptim runs locally on your Mac and uses multiple engines (MozJPEG, pngquant, Gifsicle) to find the smallest possible file. It's lossless by default — your images look identical, just smaller.

Why choose over TinyPNG: Unlimited batch, 100% offline, lossless. Tradeoff: macOS only, no WebP support, no format conversion.

5. Compressor.io — Best for SVG

Type: Web app, server-side Free tier: 5 files at a time Formats: JPEG, PNG, GIF, SVG, WebP Extras: SVG compression (rare)

One of the few tools that compresses SVG files, which is useful for logos and icons. The interface is clean but the 5-file limit is restrictive.

Why choose over TinyPNG: SVG support. Tradeoff: Very small batch limit.

6. Optimizilla — Best for visual comparison

Type: Web app, server-side Free tier: 20 images Formats: JPEG, PNG Extras: Per-image quality slider with preview

Optimizilla lets you adjust compression quality individually for each image with a visual before/after preview. This is useful when different images need different quality levels.

Why choose over TinyPNG: Visual quality comparison per image. Tradeoff: No WebP, limited formats.

7. Caesium — Best free desktop app (cross-platform)

Type: Desktop app (Windows, macOS, Linux) Free tier: Unlimited Formats: JPEG, PNG, WebP Extras: Batch processing, resize, folder watching

Open-source desktop app that handles batch compression with resize support. Works on all major operating systems.

Why choose over TinyPNG: Cross-platform desktop, unlimited batch, offline. Tradeoff: Requires installation, less polished UI.

8. TinyPNG API — Best for automation

Type: REST API Free tier: 500 compressions/month Formats: JPEG, PNG, WebP Extras: SDKs for Node.js, Python, Ruby, PHP, Java

If you need TinyPNG's compression quality but want to automate it, their API is well-documented and has SDKs for every major language. 500 free compressions per month is enough for many projects.

Why this over the web tool: Automation, CI/CD integration, build pipelines. Tradeoff: Still server-side, usage limits.

Side-by-side comparison

The bottom line

TinyPNG is a good default, but it's no longer the only option worth considering. The landscape in 2026 offers genuinely better alternatives depending on what you prioritize:

Privacy first → Pikkx or Squoosh (client-side, nothing uploaded) WordPress workflow → ShortPixel (best plugin integration) Maximum control → Squoosh (granular codec settings) Unlimited offline batch → ImageOptim (Mac) or Caesium (cross-platform) Automation → TinyPNG API or ShortPixel API

The best tool is the one that fits your workflow. Try a few with your actual images and see which produces the results you're happy with.

Try Pikkx — the privacy-first alternative

Compress, resize, and convert images in your browser. No uploads, no account, no limits on batches.

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