Squoosh vs TinyPNG vs Squishly

Three good image compressors, three different philosophies. We use all of them — here’s an honest take on what each does best, so you can pick the right one for the job. (Yes, we make one of them. We’ll keep it fair.)

Squoosh
Google · open source
Runs in your browser
Files stay private
Batch / ZIP
Free
TinyPNG
Popular · great quality
Runs in your browser
Files stay private
Batch / ZIP
Freemium
Squishly
OURS
Private · all-in-one
Runs in your browser
Files stay private
Batch / ZIP
Free, no limits

Squoosh

Best for hand-tuning one image

Squoosh, from Google’s Chrome team, is a little marvel. It runs entirely in your browser, shows a live before/after slider, and lets you fiddle with every encoder setting imaginable. For squeezing one hero image just right, it’s hard to beat — and it’s free and open source.

Great for
  • Granular, pro-level controls
  • Live quality preview
  • Runs client-side — private too
  • Free & open source
Watch out
  • One image at a time
  • No batch or ZIP download
  • Settings can feel technical

TinyPNG

Best for quality and integrations

TinyPNG earned its fans for good reason: its smart lossy compression is excellent, the interface is dead simple, and the Photoshop plugin and API make it a staple in lots of design workflows. If quality-per-kilobyte is your priority, it’s superb.

Great for
  • Outstanding compression quality
  • Effortless to use
  • Photoshop plugin & developer API
  • Handles PNG, JPG and WebP
Watch out
  • Uploads your files to its servers
  • Free tier has monthly limits
  • Compression-only — no resize/convert suite

Squishly

Best for private, all-in-one, in bulk

We built Squishly for the everyday jobs: compress, convert, resize and crop, all in one place, all in your browser. Nothing uploads, there are no limits, and you can squish a whole batch and download it as a ZIP. It’s newer, so the toolbox is still growing — but for fast, private, no-nonsense work it’s exactly what we wanted.

Great for
  • Nothing ever leaves your browser
  • Compress, convert, resize & crop together
  • Unlimited and free
  • Batch with one-click ZIP
Watch out
  • Newer — smaller tool set (for now)
  • No cloud account or history
The verdict

All three are genuinely good. Reach for Squoosh when you want to hand-tune a single image and see every setting. Pick TinyPNG for its rock-solid quality and the Photoshop plugin and API. And use Squishly when you want a fast, private, do-everything tool — compress, convert, resize and crop in one place, in bulk, with nothing ever leaving your browser.