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About Us

About FreetoolOnline - the editorial team, the no-upload promise, and how the 100+ browser-based tools are kept truthful from one publishing pass to the next.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-10

Browse the tools. Free Tool Online groups its 100+ no-upload, browser-based utilities into seven hubs: ZIP tools, image converter tools, image editing tools, device test tools, developer tools, PDF tools, and video converter tools. The home page lists the full alphabetical catalogue.

Have a question, a tool request, or feedback on a result? Reach the editorial team via the contact page - every message is read, and tool ideas with a clear use case typically ship within one cycle if the underlying capability already exists in another tool.

The page-freshness signal explained. Every tool page shows a “Last reviewed” date and an editorial byline so you can confirm the listed steps still match the current tool behaviour before acting on them. The signal is two-sided: the date dates the wording; the byline names the editor who hand-checked it. If the listed steps no longer match what the tool produces, send a one-line note via the contact page quoting the byline. The responsible editor re-checks the tool family and corrects the affected sentence in the next publishing pass.

The in-browser, no-upload reassurance. Source files stay in the browser. Actions like convert, compress, and extract run on the device. None of the 100+ tools require uploading the source file. The same reassurance applies whether you convert one image, compress a folder, or extract a ZIP - the action runs locally and the source file does not leave the tab while the convert, compress, or extract step is in progress.

How to find the tool you need fast. If you know the file type, start at the matching hub: image converter tools for HEIC, SVG, PNG, WebP, Base64, and GIF-frame work; ZIP tools for folder-of-files compression; PDF tools for merge, split, compress, and password tasks. If you know the verb but not the file type, browse the site map - it groups every tool by the action it performs (convert, compress, extract, test, format). And if you only have a query in mind, the home page alphabetical catalogue lists every tool name so the right one is one click away.

What you will see on a tool page. Each of the 100+ tool pages follows the same reading order so the next step is always in the same place. The upload slot or input field sits at the top, directly under the page title, so the action begins above the fold without scrolling. Immediately below the controls, a short green-bordered panel summarises what the tool actually does - one or two sentences in plain language, with no marketing claims attached. Further down, a numbered step list walks through the typical run, and a frequently-asked-questions block answers the recurring edge cases (supported formats, file-size ceilings, what happens to the source file). The privacy policy details the data-handling promise that applies across every tool, and a quick visit to the contact page reaches the editor responsible for the tool family if a listed step no longer matches the live behaviour.