Compress Video to 10MB
How to finish the file
- 01
Open FastEdit
Go to app.fastedit.net. The compressor runs locally in your browser, so your video is not uploaded to a server.
- 02
Load your video
Drag in an MP4, MOV, WebM, GIF, animated WebP, or APNG file. For best compatibility after compression, export as MP4.
- 03
Set fit-to-size to 10MB
Enable fit-to-size and enter 10MB as the target. FastEdit calculates the bitrate needed for your video duration.
- 04
Trim or resize if quality is too low
If the preview looks soft, trim dead time first or reduce resolution to 720p or 480p. Shorter videos get more bitrate per second.
- 05
Export under 10MB
Preview the result and export. The compressed file downloads to your device, ready for Discord, forms, email, or messaging apps.
Benefits
- Targets 10MB directly with fit-to-size instead of manual bitrate guesswork.
- Processes locally in your browser, so private clips never leave your device.
- Works with common video inputs including MP4, MOV, WebM, GIF, animated WebP, and APNG.
- Lets you trim, crop, resize, and compress in one workflow before export.
- Free output with no watermark, no signup, and no artificial server upload cap.
Compression Tips
- A 10-second video can usually keep 1080p if the source is not too noisy or fast-moving.
- A 30-second video fits 10MB best at 720p with VP9, AV1, or efficient H.264 settings.
- A 60-second video at 10MB often needs 480p or lower motion to stay readable.
- For videos longer than 2 minutes, trim first. Compressing hard enough to hit 10MB usually damages detail.
- Use MP4 with H.264 when compatibility matters. Use WebM with VP9 or AV1 when smallest size matters and the destination supports it.
Shrink the file, keep the quality in sight, and never hand over the original.
Compress in FastEdit