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Honest comparison · Updated 2026-05-16

QuickPix vs TinyPNG

TinyPNG is the cloud-based image compression standard that millions of designers use daily. QuickPix is a Mac-native alternative that runs entirely on your device. Both produce smaller JPEGs and PNGs. The key difference is whether your images ever leave your computer.

Dimension-by-dimension

DimensionQuickPixTinyPNGEdge
Where compression happens100% locally on your Mac. Files never leave.Uploaded to TinyPNG's servers, compressed, downloaded back.
Compression quality (PNG/JPEG)Powered by macOS native sips engine. Excellent results, but sometimes 5-10% larger than TinyPNG.Industry-leading smart compression algorithm. Often produces the smallest output for the same visual quality.
Format support28+ formats including HEIC, WebP, AVIF, JPEG 2000, TIFF.PNG, JPEG, WebP. Limited modern format support in the web tool.
Batch size limitUnlimited. Process 1000+ images in one go.Free tier capped at 20 images per batch.
PrivacyNo upload, no telemetry, no account. Internal screenshots stay private.TOS allows server-side processing and limited sampling for improvement.
PricingFree + one-time Pro purchase.Free for limited use; paid API for high volume.
Workflow integration on MacFolder watching (Pro), drag-drop, paste with ⌘⇧V.Browser-based; needs upload/download for each batch.

QuickPix advantage · TinyPNG advantage · roughly equal

Where QuickPix wins

  • Privacy by default. Internal screenshots, unannounced product renders, client work — none of it touches a third-party server.
  • HEIC, AVIF, WebP, and 25 other formats. TinyPNG's web tool is JPEG/PNG/WebP only.
  • Unlimited batches vs TinyPNG's 20-image free cap.
  • Mac-native workflow integration — folder watching, paste, drag to any app.

Where TinyPNG wins

  • Best-in-class compression algorithm. TinyPNG's algorithm consistently produces some of the smallest JPEG/PNG files at equivalent visual quality. If absolute byte count is the only metric, TinyPNG often wins.
  • Zero installation. Drop a file in the browser. Works on any OS.

Pick QuickPix if…

You compress images regularly, care about privacy, work with HEIC or modern formats, or just don't want to upload internal work to a third-party server.

See QuickPix

Pick TinyPNG if…

You compress occasionally, only do JPEG/PNG, are not constrained by upload limits, and absolutely smallest byte size is your only metric.

Visit TinyPNG site

If you're a designer or developer who ships images frequently, the cumulative privacy cost of TinyPNG-style cloud compression is real. QuickPix exists to solve that without compromising on speed or batch size.

Frequently asked questions

What's the main difference between QuickPix and TinyPNG?+

TinyPNG is the cloud-based image compression standard that millions of designers use daily. QuickPix is a Mac-native alternative that runs entirely on your device. Both produce smaller JPEGs and PNGs. The key difference is whether your images ever leave your computer.

Should I choose QuickPix or TinyPNG?+

Pick QuickPix if: You compress images regularly, care about privacy, work with HEIC or modern formats, or just don't want to upload internal work to a third-party server. Pick TinyPNG if: You compress occasionally, only do JPEG/PNG, are not constrained by upload limits, and absolutely smallest byte size is your only metric.

What can QuickPix do that TinyPNG can't?+

Privacy by default. Internal screenshots, unannounced product renders, client work — none of it touches a third-party server. HEIC, AVIF, WebP, and 25 other formats. TinyPNG's web tool is JPEG/PNG/WebP only. Unlimited batches vs TinyPNG's 20-image free cap.

Where does TinyPNG win over QuickPix?+

Best-in-class compression algorithm. TinyPNG's algorithm consistently produces some of the smallest JPEG/PNG files at equivalent visual quality. If absolute byte count is the only metric, TinyPNG often wins. Zero installation. Drop a file in the browser. Works on any OS.

How much does QuickPix cost compared to TinyPNG?+

QuickPix: Free + one-time Pro purchase. TinyPNG: Free for limited use; paid API for high volume.

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