You export a PDF for a form, only to discover the scanner settings produced a 25MB monster for three pages. In practice, the fastest wins come from fixing the source first, then doing one clean optimisation pass (not five repeated re-saves).
In this image guide—Best Trick to Shrink Scanned PDFs: Convert Pages to JPG and Rebuild—you’ll learn what makes files large, which changes deliver the biggest savings, and how to keep the result readable and portal-friendly. Below is a straightforward workflow you can repeat.
When you’re ready, use Image tools (and the related tools listed below). The approach is: clean first → optimise once → verify.
Make images smaller without losing readability
Start with crop and resize. Compression alone can’t fix a 6000px photo used for a 1200px web slot.
Workflow
- Crop with Image Cropper.
- Resize to a realistic size for your use case.
- Export as JPG (photos) or PNG (logos/transparency) and verify at 100% zoom.
A 60‑second action plan
- Remove pages you don’t need (blank pages, duplicates).
- Fix order/rotation so the document is reviewable.
- Run one clean optimisation pass (don’t repeat it five times).
- Verify at 100% zoom and test on mobile.
Most “stuck” cases are solved by the first two steps. Once the file is structurally clean, optimisation becomes predictable.
Quality check before you hit “Submit”
Don’t trust the thumbnail preview—open the file properly and verify the details.
- Open at 100% zoom and check the smallest text (names, dates, serial numbers).
- Scroll every page for rotation, missing pages, and blank pages created by exports.
- Confirm file size against the true limit (some portals count after upload).
- Test on mobile if the recipient opens it on a phone.
- Do a test upload if possible; validators can reject encryption or unusual PDF structures.
Troubleshooting by error message
If the platform gives an error, treat it like a diagnosis—not a suggestion to ‘compress harder’.
- “File too large”: Get under the limit by cleaning pages and compressing once. If quality matters, split with Split PDF.
- “File can’t be processed / invalid”: Re-export a clean copy and avoid encryption. A single clean pass via PDF tools often resolves validator errors.
- “Upload failed” (but size is ok): try smaller parts or a lighter file (timeouts are common).
- “Security settings / password protected”: portals often reject encrypted files—use an unencrypted export.
Real-world examples (what “good” looks like)
As a sanity check, compare your output to typical ranges for similar documents.
- 1–3 page form: commonly under 500KB–2MB (depends on scans/photos).
- 10–20 page text report: often 1–5MB when exported cleanly and images optimised.
- Scanned pages: biggest wins come from grayscale + sensible DPI (~150–200).
On mobile: what changes
Mobile uploads fail more often due to timeouts. If a portal keeps failing, try smaller parts or a lighter file and upload over stable Wi‑Fi.
Common mistakes
- Leaving comments/annotations when the portal expects a clean file.
- Embedding videos in slides when a link would do.
- Uploading the wrong format (PNG instead of JPG; PPTX instead of PDF).
- Compressing five times in a row instead of doing one clean export.
- Repeated re-saving that adds incremental-save history and duplicate resources.
- Keeping full‑colour scans when grayscale is acceptable.
- Exporting via “Print to PDF” (often flattens text into images).
FAQ
What should I do on mobile?
Do the final check on the same device you’ll submit from. Mobile viewers can reveal issues (blurry text, missing fonts) you won’t notice on desktop.
Is it safe for private documents?
Prefer tools that process locally in the browser and keep a clean local copy. For highly sensitive files, avoid unknown uploaders.
Why does my image look blurry?
Either it was resized too small or JPEG quality was set too low. Keep a sensible pixel size and check text at 100% zoom.
How do I get even smaller without blur?
Prefer splitting, grayscale for scans, and resizing images before export. Extreme compression is what creates blur.
Why did the file get bigger after editing?
Some editors add incremental-save history and duplicated resources. A clean export + one optimisation pass usually fixes it.
Related guides you can use next
- PDF to PNG or JPG: Best Export Settings for Forms, Websites and Social Media
- JPG vs PNG: Which Format Gives You the Smallest File Size?
- Ideal Image Sizes for Blogs, Portfolios, and Shops
- Crop an Image to Passport/ID Photo Size (Without Stretching or Blurry Text)
- PNG Transparency vs File Size: When to Use PNG and When to Switch to JPG
- JPG to PDF: Make a Small A4 Multi‑Page PDF Without Losing Readability
Final takeaways
For most submissions, the winning pattern is consistent: clean first → optimise once → verify. That keeps quality high and reduces portal errors.
Next step: run Image tools and use the checklist above before you upload or send.