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How to send a video larger than 25MB through Gmail

Gmail caps attachments at 25MB. Here's the Compress Video workflow that gets your file under the limit in seconds, with no quality nightmare.

The real reason this is annoying is rarely the file itself: a video just over the Gmail attachment limit, and you have to send it now.

Gmail's hard cap is 25MB per outgoing message. Gmail offers a Drive link automatically for files between 25MB and 10GB. Anything bigger gets rejected — sometimes silently, more often after you've waited 30 seconds for the upload bar to crawl. The fix is to bring the video below that threshold before you hit Attach.

Launch the tool: Compress Video — Browser-only. Nothing is sent to a server.

Why this happens

Videos grow for predictable reasons — embedded images at full camera resolution, fonts shipped twice, scanned pages saved at 600 DPI, video clips that were never meant for email. The original was fine for archiving, but it isn't shaped for email. Open the tool below and follow along.

How to bring a video under 25MB

  1. Open Compress Video in any modern browser. Nothing installs.
  2. Drag the video onto the drop zone. Multiple files work too; Compress Video processes them in a single pass.
  3. Pick a compression preset. "Balanced" is the right answer 95% of the time — visually identical output, file size cut by 50–80%.
  4. Wait for processing — usually under five seconds for a video smaller than 50MB.
  5. Download the result. It lands in your default downloads folder under the original filename, suffixed.
  6. Attach the smaller version to Gmail and send. The size badge in the attachment row should now read well below 25MB.

If you have a stack of videos to send to the same person, drop them in together — Compress Video handles a batch in one click, then you attach the whole folder.

What if it's still too big?

A few videos resist compression — usually because they're already aggressively compressed, or they're video / audio at high bitrate. Two reliable next moves:

  • Trim or split. If the video is content-rich, sending half today and half tomorrow often beats forcing it into one attachment.
  • Switch to a cloud link. Gmail itself will offer "10GB via Google Drive link" once you exceed the limit. Google Drive, OneDrive, Dropbox, and WeTransfer all give you a copy-paste link that bypasses every mail provider's cap.

Run it in your browser

Compress Video →

Free, no account required, no watermark.

Frequently asked questions

Why does Gmail reject files over 25MB?

It's a server-side rule, not a client setting. Gmail offers a Drive link automatically for files between 25MB and 10GB.

What's the maximum I should attach to Gmail, in practice?

Stay 10–15% under the hard cap. Gmail's 25MB is the wire limit, but base64 encoding inflates the body by ~33%. Headroom prevents the "rejected after 30 seconds" failure mode.

Why is base64 encoding mentioned — what does that mean for me?

Email attachments are base64-encoded on the wire, which adds about 33% to the file size during transit. Gmail's 25MB is measured after that inflation, which is why a video that's exactly 25MB on disk will sometimes still bounce.

Does Compress Video upload my video to a server?

No. Compress Video runs entirely in your browser using WebAssembly. The video never leaves your device — there is no server to send it to.

Related guides


Ready to try it?

Run it in your browser: Compress Video. Everything happens locally in your browser — your file never leaves your device.


Last reviewed May 2026. File-size limits, portal requirements, and software defaults change over time — always verify with the destination platform before uploading time-sensitive documents. References to third-party services and products are for descriptive purposes only and do not imply any partnership or endorsement.