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Each operating system has its own quirks for PDF compression. Knowing the built-in path is useful — and knowing when to skip it for a browser tool is useful too.
Mac (Preview)
Open the file in Preview → File → Export → Quartz Filter “Reduce File Size”. Fast and free. Downside: the filter is aggressive and old, and image quality often takes a noticeable hit.
Windows
Windows has no built-in PDF compressor. The “Microsoft Print to PDF” route doesn’t compress — it re-prints. You either install third-party software or use a browser tool.
iPhone / iPad (Files app)
iOS has no native compressor. Workaround: open the PDF in Pages, export back to PDF, choose a “smaller” preset. Fragile and lossy.
Android
No native compression on stock Android. Most “free PDF” apps inject watermarks or upload your file to ad-supported servers.
The cross-platform shortcut
Browser-based compression sidesteps all of the above. The same UI, the same defaults, the same output — whether you’re on a 2015 MacBook, a corporate Windows laptop, or your phone in a queue. No install, no driver, no compatibility table to consult.
What to look for in a browser tool
- No watermark on output — disqualifies most free apps and many “free trial” desktop tools.
- SSL transfer + auto-delete — your invoice or contract shouldn’t sit on a stranger’s server.
- Preset choices, not a single slider — different jobs need different defaults.
Frequently asked questions
Is browser-based compression as good as desktop?
For everyday jobs, yes — modern browser tools call into the same compression libraries (Ghostscript, MuPDF, Stirling-PDF) that desktop apps use.
Will iPhone Files app compress a PDF?
No, not directly. The Pages workaround is lossy and unpredictable; a browser compressor on the same phone is more reliable.