Many email servers reject attachments over 25 MB. If your presentation exceeds this limit, the message bounces back or the recipient cannot download the file. Large file sizes usually come from high-resolution images, embedded videos, and unused slide content. This article explains how to shrink a PowerPoint file below 25 MB using built-in compression tools and content cleanup methods.
Key Takeaways: How to Compress a PowerPoint File for Email
- File > Info > Compress Pictures: Reduces image resolution to 150 PPI or lower, cutting file size by 50 to 80 percent.
- File > Options > Advanced > Image Size and Quality > Discard editing data: Removes cropped image areas permanently to save space.
- File > Info > Compress Media: Converts embedded video and audio to a lower bitrate format for smaller file size.
Why PowerPoint Files Grow Larger Than 25 MB
The most common cause is high-resolution images. A single 20-megapixel photo from a modern smartphone can exceed 6 MB. When you insert multiple such photos, the file size climbs quickly. PowerPoint stores a full-resolution copy of each image by default, even if you crop or resize it on the slide.
Embedded videos are the second-largest contributor. A 30-second 1080p video clip can be 30 MB or more. PowerPoint does not compress video during insertion. The file size equals the original video file size.
Unused slide masters, hidden slides, and embedded fonts also add weight. Each slide master stores layout data and background graphics. Hidden slides are still stored in the file. Embedded fonts increase the file size by several megabytes, depending on the font.
By compressing images, compressing media, and removing unused content, you can reduce a 50 MB presentation to under 25 MB without losing visible quality.
Steps to Compress Images in PowerPoint
- Open the presentation and go to File > Info
Click the File tab in the top-left corner. Select Info from the left sidebar. You see the Properties section and the Compress Pictures button below it. - Click Compress Pictures
In the Info panel, click the Compress Pictures button. A dialog box opens with resolution options. - Select the target resolution
Choose 150 PPI for email attachments. This resolution is clear on screen and prints well at standard sizes. For smaller files, choose 96 PPI. Do not check “Apply only to this picture” unless you want to compress a single image. - Delete cropped areas
Check the box “Delete cropped areas of pictures.” This permanently removes the parts of images you cropped. PowerPoint cannot restore them later, so verify your crop is correct before proceeding. - Click OK and save the file
Click OK to apply compression. Press Ctrl+S to save the changes. Check the new file size in File Explorer.
Steps to Compress Media in PowerPoint
- Open the presentation and go to File > Info
Click the File tab and select Info. Look for the Compress Media button in the Media Size and Performance section. - Click Compress Media
A dropdown menu shows three quality levels: Full HD, HD, and Standard. Choose the option that matches your delivery method. - Select Standard (240p–360p) for smallest file size
Standard quality reduces video resolution to approximately 360p and audio bitrate to 96 kbps. This is acceptable for email attachments where the recipient views the video on a small screen. - Wait for the compression to finish
PowerPoint processes each video file. A progress bar appears at the bottom of the window. The time depends on the number and length of videos. - Save the presentation
Press Ctrl+S to save. Verify the file size in File Explorer. If the file is still above 25 MB, repeat the process with a lower quality setting.
Steps to Remove Unused Content and Reduce File Size
- Open Slide Master view
Go to View > Slide Master. In the left pane, look for slide masters that are not used in any slide. Right-click an unused master and select Delete Master. - Delete hidden slides
Close Slide Master view. Go to View > Slide Sorter. Right-click any slide that is grayed out or has a slash through its number. Select Delete Slide. - Remove embedded fonts
Go to File > Options > Save. Under Preserve fidelity when sharing this presentation, uncheck “Embed fonts in the file.” Click OK. - Clear the clipboard
Copy any single character on any slide. This clears large clipboard data that PowerPoint sometimes stores. Press Ctrl+C, then press Escape. Save the file. - Check file size
Right-click the file in File Explorer and select Properties. If the file is still above 25 MB, repeat the image compression step with 96 PPI resolution.
Common Mistakes and Limitations When Compressing PowerPoint Files
Compressing only one image instead of all images
The Compress Pictures dialog defaults to apply changes to the selected picture only. If you have multiple large images, uncheck “Apply only to this picture” to compress all images at once. Otherwise, you must repeat the process for each image.
Using linked videos instead of embedded videos
Linked videos are not stored inside the PowerPoint file. When you send the file by email, the video is missing. The recipient sees a broken media icon. Always embed videos before compressing. To embed, go to Insert > Video > This Device and select the file.
Compressing media multiple times
Each compression pass degrades video and audio quality further. If the file is still above 25 MB after one Standard compression, consider removing the video entirely and providing a link to a cloud-hosted version instead.
Not saving after compression
Compression changes are not applied until you save the file. If you close PowerPoint without saving, the file size remains unchanged. Press Ctrl+S immediately after each compression step.
PowerPoint Compression Methods: File Size Reduction Comparison
| Method | Typical Reduction | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Compress Pictures 150 PPI | 50–70 percent | Presentations with many high-res photos |
| Compress Pictures 96 PPI | 70–90 percent | Screen-only viewing or small email attachment limits |
| Compress Media Standard | 60–80 percent | Videos over 30 seconds or multiple clips |
| Delete unused slide masters | 1–5 MB | Templates with many custom layouts |
| Remove embedded fonts | 1–10 MB per font | Files with custom branding fonts |
You can now compress a PowerPoint file below 25 MB using image and media compression tools built into PowerPoint. Start with Compress Pictures at 150 PPI, then use Compress Media at Standard quality if videos are present. Remove unused slide masters and embedded fonts for additional savings. For very large files, consider removing videos and sharing them through a cloud link such as OneDrive or SharePoint.