How to Send a File That's Too Large to Email
When a file is too large to email, it exceeds your email provider's attachment size limit. Gmail caps attachments at 25MB, Outlook at 20MB, and most business email systems between 10-25MB. This guide covers six proven methods to send oversized files, from quick compression fixes to professional cloud sharing solutions.
Email Attachment Size Limits by Provider
Before choosing a solution, know your limits. Every email provider enforces maximum attachment sizes:
| Provider | Attachment Limit |
|---|---|
| Gmail | 25MB |
| Outlook.com | 20MB |
| Yahoo Mail | 25MB |
| Exchange (business) | 10-25MB |
| iCloud Mail | 20MB |
| AOL Mail | 25MB |
These limits exist because email servers weren't built for large file transfers. When you hit them, your email either bounces back or strips the attachment entirely.
85% of professionals encounter this issue weekly, according to a 2025 workplace productivity survey. Video files, design assets, and project archives regularly exceed these thresholds.
Solution 1: Compress Your Files
Compression reduces file size by removing redundant data. It works well for documents, spreadsheets, and uncompressed images.
How to compress on Windows:
- Right-click the file or folder
- Select "Send to"
- Click "Compressed (zipped) folder"
How to compress on Mac:
- Right-click the file or folder
- Select "Compress"
Compression can shrink text-heavy files by 70-90%. But files that are already compressed won't shrink much. MP4 videos, JPEGs, PDFs, and ZIP archives are already optimized. A 100MB video file might only compress to 98MB.
Best for: Documents, spreadsheets, raw images, presentations Skip if: Your files are videos, photos, or already compressed formats
Solution 2: Use Your Email Provider's Cloud Integration
Most email providers now integrate with cloud storage. Instead of attaching the file directly, you upload it to the cloud and share a link.
Gmail with Google Drive:
- Click the Drive icon in the compose window
- Upload files up to 10GB
- Gmail automatically converts oversized attachments to Drive links
Outlook with OneDrive:
- Click "Attach" then "Browse cloud locations"
- Upload files to OneDrive
- Share as a link instead of attachment
Apple Mail with Mail Drop:
- Attachments over 20MB automatically upload to iCloud
- Recipients get a download link valid for 30 days
- Supports files up to 5GB
This approach is convenient because you're already in your email client. But there are tradeoffs. Recipients need to click an extra link. File access depends on your cloud storage quota. And for sensitive files, you're relying on basic security that may not meet business requirements.
Solution 3: Dedicated File Transfer Services
File transfer services are built specifically for sending large files. You upload your file, get a link, and share it.
Popular options:
- WeTransfer: Up to 2GB free, 200GB on paid plans
- SendAnywhere: Up to 10GB without an account
- Filemail: Up to 5GB free
These services work, but they come with limitations. Free tiers cap your file sizes. Files often expire after 7-14 days. And most importantly, you lose control once the file leaves your hands. Anyone with the link can download it, and you can't revoke access or track who viewed it.
For one-off transfers to people you trust, these services are fine. For business use or sensitive content, you need more control.
Solution 4: Professional Cloud Storage
For teams that regularly share large files, professional cloud storage offers a better approach than email attachments or file transfer services.
Instead of sending files as attachments, you share access to files that live in the cloud. This gives you:
Files stay available: Files don't expire after 7 days. Share a project folder once, and collaborators always have access to the latest versions.
Security controls: Set passwords, expiration dates, and view-only permissions. Revoke access instantly if needed. Set up a client portal for external collaborators who need ongoing access.
Activity tracking: See who viewed, downloaded, or shared your files. Audit logs provide accountability for sensitive documents.
Large files just work: Business-grade platforms handle files that would never fit in an email. Video files, design packages, and data archives transfer without compression or splitting.
Fast.io supports unlimited file sizes with no per-seat pricing. You can invite clients and collaborators without paying extra for each user. Files belong to your organization, not individual accounts, so nothing disappears when someone leaves the team.
Solution 5: Split Large Files
When compression isn't enough and you need to use email, you can split a file into smaller parts. Each part stays under the attachment limit.
Using 7-Zip (Windows):
- Right-click your file
- Select "7-Zip" then "Add to archive"
- Set "Split to volumes" to your email's limit (e.g., 20MB)
- Send each part as a separate email
Using Keka (Mac):
- Open Keka
- Drag your file into the app
- Set the split size
- Send the resulting parts separately
Recipients need to download all parts and reassemble them using the same tool. This works in a pinch, but it's awkward for everyone involved. If one email gets lost or filtered as spam, the whole transfer fails. Your recipient also needs to know how to merge split archives.
Best for: Emergency situations when you must use email Skip if: You have any other option available
Solution 6: Resize or Convert Before Sending
Sometimes the best solution is making the file smaller before sharing. This works well for media files where you don't need maximum quality.
Video: Use Handbrake (free) to reduce resolution from 4K to 1080p, or adjust the bitrate. A 500MB video might shrink to 50MB with minimal visible quality loss.
Images: Export at lower resolution or use JPEG compression. For screenshots and web graphics, PNG to JPEG conversion often cuts size by 80%.
Documents: Export PowerPoint presentations as PDFs. A 50-slide presentation with embedded images might go from 100MB to 15MB.
Audio: Convert WAV to MP3 or reduce the bitrate. A 10-minute WAV file (100MB) becomes a 10MB MP3 at 128kbps.
This approach makes sense when you're sharing for review, not final delivery. A client reviewing a video edit doesn't need 4K. A colleague reading a report doesn't need print-resolution images.
For final deliverables where quality matters, use a proper file sharing solution instead of degrading your work.
Choosing the Right Solution
Your best option depends on what you're sending and why.
For quick one-time transfers: Use your email provider's cloud integration (Gmail+Drive, Outlook+OneDrive). It's already there, and recipients know how to use links.
For sensitive business files: Use professional cloud storage with security controls. You need audit trails, access revocation, and password protection.
For ongoing collaboration: Set up shared workspaces instead of sending files back and forth. Everyone accesses the same files, always up to date.
For large media files: Skip compression entirely. Video and image quality suffers, and you'll waste time on a 5% size reduction. Use a platform built for large files.
For emergencies only: Splitting files works but creates friction. Use it as a last resort when nothing else is available.
The real issue isn't that your file is too big. Email wasn't designed for file sharing. Every workaround adds friction. The simplest solution is to share links to files that live somewhere accessible, instead of pushing large attachments through a system built for text messages.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I email a file that is too large?
You have several options: compress the file to reduce its size, use your email provider's cloud integration (Gmail automatically uses Google Drive for files over 25MB), use a file transfer service like WeTransfer, or share a link from cloud storage instead of attaching the file directly. For files over 100MB, cloud sharing is usually the most reliable approach.
What do you do if a file is too large to send?
First, check if compression helps. Right-click the file and select 'Compress' (Mac) or 'Send to > Compressed folder' (Windows). If the file is already compressed (video, JPEG, PDF), compression won't help much. In that case, upload the file to cloud storage and share a download link instead of the file itself.
How can I reduce the size of a file to email it?
For documents: export as PDF instead of native format. For images: reduce resolution or convert PNG to JPEG. For video: use Handbrake to lower the resolution or bitrate. For general files: create a ZIP archive. Note that already-compressed formats (MP4, JPEG, PDF, ZIP) won't shrink further with compression.
What is the maximum email attachment size for Gmail?
Gmail allows attachments up to 25MB total. If your attachment exceeds this limit, Gmail automatically offers to upload it to Google Drive and share a link instead. Through Google Drive, you can share files up to 10GB.
Why do emails have attachment size limits?
Email servers weren't designed for large file transfers. They store copies of messages on multiple servers as emails route to recipients. Large attachments consume storage, slow delivery, and can overwhelm server resources. The 20-25MB limit exists to keep email systems responsive and reliable for their primary purpose: text communication.
Related Resources
Stop fighting email attachment limits
Fast.io handles files of any size with no compression, no splitting, and no expired links. Share securely with clients and collaborators.