Sample HTML File — 25KB
Download a free sample HTML file that is exactly 25KB (25,600 bytes). This html web page file is generated specifically for testing and development purposes. Use it to validate file upload forms, test parsers, verify size-limit enforcement, or verify HTML handling in your application. No registration required — click the download button and get your file instantly.
File Details
| Format | HTML (.html) |
| MIME Type | text/html |
| File Size | 25KB (25 KB) |
| Exact Bytes | 25,600 bytes |
| Category | code |
| License | Free — no registration required |
Common Use Cases
- Testing HTML file upload and sanitization
- Testing HTML parsing and DOM construction
- Validating web scraping and crawling tools
- Testing HTML-to-PDF conversion at various sizes
- Verifying HTML email rendering engines
Other HTML Sizes
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a sample HTML file 25KB?
It is a valid, well-formed html web page file that has been generated to be exactly 25KB in size. It contains realistic content structure appropriate for the HTML format and can be used for testing, development, and integration purposes.
How can I use this 25KB HTML file for testing?
Common uses include testing file upload forms with size validation, evaluating HTML parser performance, verifying that your application handles 25KB files correctly, testing download speed and progress indicators, and validating server-side file processing pipelines.
Is this HTML file safe to download?
Yes. All sample files on File Examples are generated specifically for testing purposes. They contain only valid HTML content with no executable code, macros, or malicious payloads. Every file is a clean, well-formed example of its format.
Can I get this file in a different size?
Yes. We offer sample HTML files in multiple sizes ranging from small (1KB) to large (100MB). Check the related sizes section below to find the exact size you need.
What is the MIME type of this file?
The MIME type is text/html. This is the standard content type used by web servers, browsers, and APIs when serving or accepting HTML files.