Instead of chasing fake compressed files, try these safe space-saving methods:
Some groups create “download managers” that install adware, browser hijackers, or unwanted toolbars while downloading the actual Office files from Microsoft — essentially stealing bandwidth and installing junk.
| Software | Size | Compatibility | Cost | |----------|------|---------------|------| | LibreOffice Portable | ~180MB | Reads/writes DOCX, XLSX, PPTX | Free | | SoftMaker FreeOffice | ~120MB | Excellent MS compatibility | Free | | AbiWord + Gnumeric | ~50MB combined | Basic document/spreadsheet | Free |
These are real highly compressed alternatives—legitimate, safe, and under 200MB.
They fake it. Either the video is edited, or they show a remote desktop connection to a PC with full Office installed.
Microsoft Office 2016 is a productivity suite released in September 2015. It includes:
Official system requirements:
These numbers alone show why a 100MB version is unrealistic. Even with extreme compression (like 7-Zip Ultra or WinRAR’s best settings), you cannot reduce 3+ GB down to 100MB without losing core files and functionality.
Sometimes called “Office Lite” or “Office 2016 Micro,” these are heavily modified installations missing:
Even then, such stripped versions rarely fall below 300–400MB. A functional 100MB version does not exist.
No. Not a single trustworthy, fully functional version exists at that size.
Microsoft Office 2016, in its full legitimate installation package, typically occupies between 2 GB to 4 GB of disk space, depending on the edition (Home & Student, Professional, etc.) and included applications (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Access, Publisher, OneNote).
The installer itself (setup files) is rarely below 1.5 GB in compressed .iso or .exe format — even with high-efficiency compression tools like 7-Zip (LZMA2) or WinRAR.
Therefore, a 100 MB highly compressed version would require a reduction of 95–97% of the original data — something impossible without removing critical components, replacing resources with low-quality placeholders, or using deceptive repack techniques.



