Resize AVI files
Resizing is usually the biggest lever for reducing AVI file size.
Last updated: 2026-03-18
To resize AVI files, run npx optimo video.avi --resize <value>. Optimo supports three modes: percentage (50%), dimensions (w960), and target file size (150kB). Resizing reduces both dimensions and file size in one step — often more effective than compression alone.
Resize by percentage
Quick way to scale down when you don't know exact dimensions yet.
npx optimo video.avi --resize 50%
Resize by dimensions
Cap width or height to match how the asset is displayed.
npx optimo video.avi --resize w960
Use w for width and h for height.
Resize to a target file size
Useful for thumbnails and previews when you want predictable budgets.
npx optimo video.avi --resize 150kB
Start with a budget you can ship everywhere, then adjust based on quality.
AVI-specific tips
- AVI sources can be huge; start by capping width.
- If this is a screen recording, 720p is often enough.
- Compare MP4 and WebM output sizes for your content.
Related pages
More video formats
Frequently asked questions
- How do I resize AVI files?
- Optimo supports three resize modes: percentage (--resize 50%), dimensions (--resize w960 or --resize h480), and target file size (--resize 150kB). Run "npx optimo video.avi --resize <value>" to resize and optimize in one step.
- What is the best resize mode for AVI?
- Use dimensions (--resize w960) when you know the display size. Use percentage (--resize 50%) for quick scaling. Use target file size (--resize 150kB) for thumbnails and budgets. Resizing is usually the single biggest lever for reducing AVI file size.