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How to get a video under 5MB for most upload forms

5MB is the sweet-spot limit for university portals, job boards, and most web forms. Compress Video hits it without thinking.

The real reason this is annoying is rarely the file itself: a video that needs to be under 5MB.

5MB is a scanned 10-page document or a short photo album. It's tighter than the average phone snapshot and a long way from a raw scanner output. Getting there cleanly is doable, but the defaults most software ships with are tuned for archival quality, not for hitting a hard upload limit.

Run it in your browser: Compress Video — Runs entirely on your device using open web standards.

What 5MB actually looks like

For context — 5MB of a video is roughly a scanned 10-page document or a short photo album. If the original video is dramatically larger, expect a visible quality drop. If it's only marginally over, you'll hit 5MB without compromising the look.

How to hit the 5MB target with Compress Video

  1. Open Compress Video. No install, no signup.
  2. Drop the video on the upload area. Compress Video reads it locally — the file never goes to a server.
  3. Choose the most aggressive preset available. For tight size targets, you want maximum compression. The middle setting won't get you to 5MB on the first pass.
  4. Check the output size badge. Compress Video shows the result size next to the download button. If it's still above 5MB, run it through a second time with the aggressive preset.
  5. If you need exactly 5MB, accept slightly more aggressive compression than feels comfortable. Most viewers will not notice; the upload portal will.

When the first pass isn't enough

Some videos fight back. Three reliable second-pass tricks:

  • Downsize first, then compress. If the video has more resolution than the final use needs, reduce dimensions before re-encoding. Half the pixels = a third the file size, with no visible loss for screen viewing.
  • Strip embedded metadata. EXIF, color profiles, thumbnails, and history layers can add 10–30% to the size with zero visual impact. Compress Video strips them automatically on aggressive presets.
  • Convert format on the way down. If the video is in a lossless format, switching to a lossy one (where appropriate) often beats any in-format compression. Compress Video suggests the right output format based on what you're optimising for.

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Why 5MB is such a common target

It's not a coincidence. Most upload forms — government portals, university applications, job-board file uploads — settled on 5MB or thereabouts because it's the largest size that still loads quickly on mobile networks worldwide. Knowing how to hit 5MB reliably solves about 60% of all "my file is too big" situations.

Frequently asked questions

Does Compress Video support batches?

Yes — drop multiple videos at once and they all hit the 5MB target. Useful when a portal asks for multiple documents within the same per-file cap.

What if I need a video under 5MB but it must look perfect?

Lossless compression can only do so much. If you absolutely cannot lose visual quality, the answer is reducing the content — fewer pages, lower resolution where lower resolution would have been fine to begin with. Compress Video can help with both.

What's the smallest a video can reasonably get?

It depends on content. A pure-text video can compress to a few KB. A photo-heavy video hits diminishing returns somewhere between 50KB and 200KB depending on the image content.

Why can't I just zip it?

Modern videos are already compressed internally. Zipping rarely saves more than 1–2% on a video. The fix is changing the encoding inside the file, which is what Compress Video does.

Related guides


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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.