What TinyPNG genuinely does well
TinyPNG deserves its reputation. It has been compressing PNG and JPEG files since 2011 and has processed billions of images. The compression quality for PNGs in particular is excellent — it uses smart lossy compression that reduces color palettes in a way the human eye barely perceives, often shrinking a PNG by 60–80% without visible degradation.
The interface is about as simple as a tool can get. Drag your files onto the panda, watch the progress bars fill, download. There is no learning curve whatsoever. For a developer who needs to compress a handful of PNGs before a deployment, TinyPNG is a fast, reliable choice with zero friction.
Its API and Photoshop plugin also have genuine utility. Teams with automated pipelines use TinyPNG at scale. Its place in the ecosystem is legitimate and earned. This article is not here to dismiss that.
Where TinyPNG falls short in 2026
The limitations of TinyPNG's free tier are well documented — but they have not changed in years while the use cases around them have shifted considerably.
The 20-image cap.
TinyPNG's free tier limits you to 20 images per session, each under 5 MB. For a photographer culling a 200-image shoot, or a developer optimizing a full asset library, this creates constant friction. You can work around it by refreshing the page, but you should not have to.
Files leave your device.
Every image you compress with TinyPNG is uploaded to their servers. TinyPNG states files are deleted after processing, and there is no reason to doubt that. But for photographers handling client work under NDA, images with embedded GPS coordinates, or sensitive business assets, uploading to a third-party server is a meaningful consideration — not a paranoid one.
It only does one thing.
TinyPNG compresses images. That is it. There is no format conversion to WebP, no EXIF stripping, no batch renaming, no resizing. After compressing, you still have to open a different tool for every other step in your image workflow.
No AVIF or GIF support.
TinyPNG handles PNG, JPEG, and WebP. AVIF — the format delivering 20–30% better compression than WebP at equivalent quality — is not supported. GIF optimization is also absent.
Paid plan is steep for individuals.
Removing TinyPNG's limits requires purchasing API access at $39 per year. That price point is designed for teams and development pipelines — not the individual photographer or content creator who just needs to compress more than 20 files at a time.
What SammaPix does differently
SammaPix was built to solve exactly these gaps. The compression engine runs entirely inside your browser — your files are never uploaded anywhere. Open the Compress tool , drop in 200 photos, get 200 compressed files back in a ZIP. No session limit. No 5 MB cap. No account required.
Beyond compression, SammaPix is a full image workflow suite. After compressing, you can convert directly to WebP for modern web delivery, strip EXIF metadata to protect client privacy, batch resize for different platform dimensions, or use AI Rename to generate SEO-optimized filenames automatically — all without switching tabs.
A full image workflow in one place saves more time than raw compression speed alone - Photo by Luke Chesser on Unsplash
The privacy angle is not a marketing claim — it is an architectural fact. Because processing happens in-browser using JavaScript and WebAssembly, there is no server to receive your files. The images exist only on your device, in your browser's memory, until you download the output. This matters for travel photographers embedding GPS data, professionals handling client NDAs, or anyone who simply does not want their photos handled by a third party.
Head-to-head: SammaPix vs TinyPNG
Here is how the two tools compare across every dimension that matters to photographers and web professionals. See also the full TinyPNG vs SammaPix comparison page for a detailed technical breakdown.
Feature |
SammaPix |
TinyPNG |
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Pricing: the honest breakdown
Both tools are free for casual use. The gap opens when you need to go beyond the basic tier.
TinyPNG's paid product is developer-focused API access, starting at $39 per year. There is no mid-tier for the individual user who simply wants to remove the 20-image cap without integrating an API. You either stay on the free tier or pay for a developer product.
SammaPix Pro is $9 per month — designed for the individual who uses the tool regularly. It removes all limits, unlocks 200 AI renames per day, enables bulk ZIP downloads for large batches, and removes ads. For a solo photographer or content creator processing hundreds of images a week, the cost is a rounding error against the time saved.
Worth noting: SammaPix's free tier has no batch cap and no file size ceiling. The free experience is already more capable than TinyPNG's free tier for most use cases.
Verdict: which tool should you use?
Stay with TinyPNG if...
Switch to SammaPix if...
The underlying compression quality of both tools is excellent. The difference is not in the output — it is in everything else. TinyPNG is a focused, well-executed single-purpose tool. SammaPix is an image workflow built for the full picture: compression, conversion, metadata, renaming, and batch processing, all running locally in your browser.
Free — no signup, no file limits
Try SammaPix Compress — batch compress in your browser, zero uploads
FAQ
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Originally published at sammapix.com
Try it free: SammaPix — 27 browser-based image tools. Compress, resize, convert, remove background, and more. Everything runs in your browser, nothing uploaded.
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