Compress video to 50MB
50MB is a comfortable middle tier for both quality and size: much sharper than 25MB, much smaller than the original. It's Discord Nitro Basic's cap, and a common choice for slimming uploads to Telegram and Slack (high-limit platforms where you compress for speed and data, not necessity). A several-minute video at 50MB usually stays sharp. The tool above defaults to 50MB.
Quick answer
To compress to 50MB, ConvertMeow derives a bitrate from target size ÷ duration, then re-encodes. 50MB is Discord Nitro Basic's per-file cap and a great target for slimming videos on high-limit platforms like Telegram / Slack so they upload faster. It all runs locally in your browser — no upload, no watermark.
Compress your video to 50MB
Target size
Derives a bitrate from target size ÷ duration and re-encodes; best for short clips.
How long and sharp can 50MB be?
50MB is fairly roomy: a three-to-five-minute video at 50MB is usually sharp; seven or eight minutes is watchable; only past 10-plus minutes does it noticeably soften.
For everyday viewing on a phone or laptop, 50MB is often indistinguishable from the original — the sweet spot of "sharp enough without being big".
- ≤5 minutes: sharp at 50MB.
- ~5–8 minutes: acceptable at 50MB.
- 10-plus minutes: starts to soften — use a higher target or trim.
Where is 50MB mostly used?
Discord Nitro Basic's per-file cap is about 50MB. Beyond that, 50MB is more of an opt-in target: slim videos for high-limit platforms like Telegram and Slack so they upload faster and cost the recipient less data, while keeping good quality.
Frequently asked questions
It gets close. ConvertMeow derives a bitrate from target size ÷ duration and re-encodes — videos under a few minutes usually land comfortably under 50MB; very long ones may come out slightly over or under, and it shows the real output size.
Discord Nitro Basic caps around 50MB; it's also great for slimming videos on high-limit platforms like Telegram and Slack — compressing not for "will it send" but for faster uploads, less data and preserved quality.
No. Compression runs entirely locally in your browser with ffmpeg — never uploaded, no watermark, no cap.
Updated · ConvertMeow team