Fix AdSense Rejection: Free Image Compressor for Fast Load Times

A graphic showing a checklist for Google AdSense approval, highlighting site speed and E-E-A-T.

Quick Overview

AdSense rejected? Slow images might be why. This free tool helps you compress images, pass Core Web Vitals, and boost your approval chances.

★★★★★
Made with ❤️ by Rekreay

Free AdSense-Ready Image Compressor

📸 Drag & drop your image here, or click to browse

You can also paste an image (Ctrl + V)

Compressed Preview

Preview

⬇ Download

Are you a technology blogger who keeps getting rejected by Google AdSense? Does the "low-value content" or "policy violation" email hit your inbox, even though you write detailed, 100% original articles?

You're not alone. This is one of the most common frustrations. Here's the secret: "low-value content" is often Google's code for a **poor user experience**. And the number one cause of a bad user experience on a "Technology & AI" blog is **slow-loading, unoptimized images.**

Google's approval process is heavily tied to its **Core Web Vitals** (CWV). If your page takes 10 seconds to load, Google's bot will flag it as low-quality, no matter how good the text is. Your AdSense application is rejected before a human even sees it.

Tech & AI Blogger Example:

Imagine your latest guide, "The Top 5 AI Image Generators." It's filled with 20 high-resolution comparison images to prove your points. If each original PNG screenshot is 2MB, that's 40MB of data! Your page won't just be slow; it will be unusable for many users. That is an instant AdSense rejection.

By compressing those images with our tool (to 150KB each), your page's total size drops to ~3MB. The load time goes from 15 seconds to 2. *That's* the difference between rejection and approval.

To fix this, we're not just giving you a guide—we're giving you the exact tool we built to solve this problem. It's free, 100% private (it all happens in your browser), and designed to get your images fast, light, and AdSense-ready.


How to Use This Tool (A 3-Step Guide)

Using the tool is simple. Here’s a quick step-by-step guide to optimize your tech blog images.

Step 1: Upload Your Image

Drag and drop your file (e.g., a .png screenshot of a code editor or an AI-generated .jpg) into the box above. You'll immediately see the original image and its file size.

Step 2: Adjust Settings for AdSense (E-E-A-T)

This is the most important step for passing AdSense review.

  • Format: Always choose WEBP. It's Google's own format, it's 30-50% smaller than JPEG, and it supports transparency (like PNG). This signals to Google that you are a modern, expert (the 'E' in E-E-A-T) publisher who cares about site speed.
  • Quality: For tech screenshots with text, start at 85%. For AI art or photos, you can go as low as 70%.
  • Width: Don't upload a 4000px image. Resize it to match your blog's content width (e.g., 1024px or 800px).

Step 3: Check the Size and Download

Watch the "Compressed Preview" file size. Your goal for most images should be **under 150KB**. For full-width hero images, under 300KB is acceptable. Once you're happy, hit "Download" and upload the new, fast, AdSense-friendly image to your blog.

Our Experience: From "Low-Value Content" to AdSense Approved

This tool isn't just theory. When we first started Rekreay, we were obsessed with content quality. We wrote 10,000-word guides on machine learning... and got rejected by AdSense *three times* for "low-value content." It made no sense.

The problem wasn't the *text*; it was the *experience*. Our uncompressed screenshots (some 3MB!) were killing our load time. We built this tool to fix our own problem. After compressing every image on our site and getting our Core Web Vitals (LCP) score into the "green," **we were approved on the next attempt.**

Experience is the 'E' in E-E-A-T, and this tool is a direct result of our experience. Trustworthiness is the 'T', and offering a 100% private, in-browser tool (we never see your files) is how we demonstrate it.

Your AdSense & Image Questions Answered

How do large images cause AdSense rejection?

Google flags sites with a poor user experience as "low-value." The number one cause of a poor experience is slow load times. Large images are the main reason for slow loads. By failing Google's Core Web Vitals (CWV) test, your site is automatically flagged as "low-value," and your AdSense application is rejected.

What's the best image format for a tech blog in 2025?

WEBP. It's not even a question. It's Google's own format, it's 30-50% smaller than JPEG, and it supports transparency (like PNG). It's the perfect all-in-one format for code screenshots, AI-generated art, and charts. This tool defaults to WEBP for this reason.

What is a good "target size" for my blog images?

A great rule of thumb for passing CWV and AdSense is:

  • In-post images: Try to keep them **under 150KB**.
  • Full-width "hero" images: You can go up to **300KB**, but try to keep it lower.

Use our tool's live preview to find the perfect balance of quality and size.

Is this tool safe? Do you store my images?

No, we never see or store your images. This tool is 100% private. All the compression happens *locally in your browser* using JavaScript. The "Trustworthiness" (T in E-E-A-T) of our site depends on this, and we take it very seriously.

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