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Audit Space Usage Breakdown

New Here ,
Jan 30, 2025 Jan 30, 2025

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Hi all! 

I am working on compressing a PDF and I found the area that shows me the Audit Space Usage and the percentages of each. I am looking for more information about what each category is and if there is overlap between them. This is to help me know which areas of the PDF I can work to reduce size in. 

annika_2322_0-1738249117892.png

Particular areas I am not sure about are content streams, structure info, and document overhead, but if anyone has more info on what ALL of the categories consist of that would be amazing!

Thanks!

 

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Edit and convert PDFs , General troubleshooting , How to , PDF

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Adobe Employee ,
Jan 30, 2025 Jan 30, 2025

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Hi there

 

Hope you are doing well and thanks for reaching out.

 

Understanding the Audit Space Usage breakdown can definitely help in optimizing your PDF file size more effectively. Here’s an overview of the key categories you’ll see in the audit report:

  1. Images – Includes embedded images and graphics, which often take up the most space. Compression or reducing resolution can help.
  2. Fonts – Stores font data embedded in the document. If multiple fonts or full font sets are embedded, they can increase file size. Subsetting fonts can reduce this.
  3. Content Streams – These are the actual instructions that define the text, vector graphics, and layout of the PDF. Optimizing or simplifying vector elements can help reduce this size.
  4. Structure Info – Contains metadata and structural elements (like tags for accessibility). If your document doesn’t require accessibility tagging, removing unnecessary structure data may help.
  5. Document Overhead – Includes metadata, document properties, bookmarks, and other internal structures that support the document. Cleaning up unused elements can help.
  6. XObjects – Reusable graphical elements stored in the PDF (e.g., watermarks, repeated images, or form elements).
  7. Acroforms – Form fields and interactive elements in the PDF. Flattening forms can help reduce their size if they’re no longer needed as fillable fields.
  8. JavaScript – If your PDF includes scripts for interactive functionality, this is where they will be listed.

There can be some overlap between these categories, particularly with content streams and structure info when dealing with tagged PDFs, and document overhead may also include elements related to fonts, metadata, or bookmarks.

If you're looking to optimize your file, focusing on images, fonts, and content streams usually provides the biggest reduction in size.

 

For more information please check the help page https://adobe.ly/40E4gcJ

 

 

 

 

Regards
Amal

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