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P2P File Sharing

Send files of any size directly to anyone. No upload to server, completely private, 100% free forever.

✅ Any File Size 🔒 End-to-End Encrypted ⚡ Direct Transfer 🆓 100% Free 🚫 No Server Storage
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Send Files
Drop or pick files and folders. Any size, any type. Folder structure is preserved.
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Receive Files
Enter the share code from the sender to receive multiple files or a complete folder.
📤 Send Files
Drop or pick files and folders. Any size, any type. Folder structure is preserved.
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Drop files or a folder here
or click to browse files • Any type • Any size
1
Select Files
Sender picks multiple files or an entire folder — any type, any size
2
Share Code
A unique code is generated. Share it via WhatsApp, SMS, or chat
3
Direct Transfer
Receiver enters code → file transfers directly device-to-device

File Share — Send Files Directly Between Devices Without Uploading

Most file sharing services work by uploading your file to a cloud server, generating a link, and letting someone else download from that server. This tool works differently — it transfers files directly between your browser and the recipient's browser using WebRTC peer-to-peer connections. The file goes device to device without touching any server. That means no storage limits, no file retention, and no third-party server holding your data.

How it works

The sender opens the tool and selects a file. A short room code is generated. The sender shares this code (verbally, by text, or by copying a link) with the recipient. The recipient opens the tool, enters the code, and the file transfers directly from the sender's browser to the recipient's browser. Both devices need to be online simultaneously — unlike cloud storage, there's no "upload first, download later" option. The transfer happens live.

The connection is established using WebRTC, the same technology used in browser-based video calls. A signalling server helps the two browsers find each other to initiate the connection, but the actual file data flows directly between browsers.

Common use cases

Sending files within an office: Sharing a large presentation or video between two colleagues on the same network or over the internet, without uploading to a shared drive first. On a good corporate network, the transfer is fast.

Sharing files with privacy concerns: Documents you don't want stored on a cloud server — legal documents, financial data, personal photos, internal business files. Since the file never touches a server, there's nothing to be hacked or data-breached from a storage provider.

Sending files that cloud services won't accept: Some cloud storage services refuse to store certain file types or impose restrictions on executable files, large media files, or files that trigger content moderation. Direct P2P transfer has no such restrictions.

Transferring files between your own devices: You're on your phone and want to send a photo or document to your laptop quickly, without emailing it to yourself. Enter the same room code on both devices and transfer directly.

Quick one-off transfers in India: In contexts where uploading to WeTransfer or Google Drive and sharing a link would take minutes (especially on slower connections), a direct P2P transfer on the same local network can be significantly faster since the data travels locally rather than going up to the internet and back down.

Tips

For the fastest transfers, both devices should be on the same WiFi network or a wired connection. P2P transfers on the same local network don't need to go through the internet — they're LAN-speed transfers in a browser.

Keep both browser tabs open and active during the transfer. If either party closes their tab or navigates away, the transfer will be interrupted. This is a live connection, not a queued upload.

For very large files (several GB), be patient on slower connections and don't close the browser. The transfer rate depends entirely on the connection between the two devices — there's no server-side speed boost.

Limitations

Both parties must be online at the same time. Unlike cloud storage or WeTransfer, you cannot upload and let the recipient download later — the connection must be live.

Corporate firewalls and strict NAT configurations can block WebRTC peer connections. In some enterprise network environments, the connection may not establish even if the signalling works. In these cases, a cloud-based file sharing service is the more reliable option.

Transfer speed is limited by the slower of the two connections. If one party is on a mobile network with limited bandwidth, that caps the transfer rate regardless of how fast the other party's connection is.

Frequently Asked Questions

No! Since files transfer directly between devices (P2P), there is absolutely no file size limit. You can send files of any size — 1MB or 100GB.

100% private. Files are transferred directly between the two devices using WebRTC encryption. The file never passes through any server — only the connection code is briefly handled by a signaling server.

Yes, both sender and receiver must have the page open at the same time. The sender must keep the page open until the transfer completes. This is how P2P works.

Speed depends on both devices' internet connections. On the same WiFi network it can be very fast (50-100 MB/s). Over the internet it depends on upload speed of sender and download speed of receiver.

Any file type! Documents, images, videos, ZIP files, executables, anything. There are no restrictions on file type.

Yes! P2P file sharing costs us nothing because files don't pass through our servers. This tool will always be free.

Yes. When you send a folder, the receiver gets the same folder structure when they download as ZIP. Subfolders, nested files, and folder names are all kept intact.