shrinkclip

runs 100% in your browser

Compress a video to 25 MB

Free, in your browser, nothing uploaded. Drop the file, press the button.

25 MB is the attachment limit for Gmail and most mail servers, so it's the number that decides whether your video sends or gets bounced. ShrinkClip targets it precisely and enforces the cap, all without your file ever leaving the browser.

uses your device's built-in video encoder · nothing to install · no file ever leaves your browser

No upload queue

Compression runs on your own CPU. A 500 MB recording never crawls up your connection to someone's server — there's nothing to upload, wait on, or trust.

No command line to learn

The same H.264 encoding professionals tune by hand — with the bitrate math and resolution worked out for you. Pick a size, press the button.

Private by default

Your video is processed in browser memory and discarded when you close the tab. We never see a frame of it — only anonymous size and preset stats.

Questions people actually ask

My 25 MB attachment still bounced — why?

Email base64-encodes attachments, inflating them by about a third, so a 25 MB file travels as ~33 MB. Target 20 MB or less for a safety margin, or share via a link for anything bigger.

Is 25 MB enough for a decent-looking clip?

For a minute or two of 720p, comfortably. Longer footage at 25 MB still looks fine on a phone or laptop; only very long clips start to soften.