Guides

How to Send Large Files for Free (Without Signing Up)

Need to send a big file fast? Here are the easiest free ways to send large files without an account — and how to keep them private on the way there.

You have a file that’s too big for email, a deadline, and no patience for sign-up screens. Here’s the quickest way to send a large file for free — and how to make sure it stays private on the way there.

The fastest way: open a room and share a code

Most people reach for email or a cloud link out of habit, but both add steps. The quickest route is a direct room between two browsers:

  1. Open a private room — no account, no download.
  2. Drop your file in. It’s prepared for transfer right inside your browser.
  3. Share the short code (it looks like swift-otter-4821) by text, chat, or out loud.
  4. The other person types the code in their browser and the file lands on their device.

That’s it. Nothing to install on either side, and when you’re done the room closes itself.

Why most “free” file senders aren’t really free

Free tools have to pay for themselves somehow. Usually that means one of three things: you sit through ads, your file is stored on a server for days or weeks, or the download link keeps working long after you’ve forgotten about it. None of that matters for a meme. It matters a lot for a contract, a passport scan, or a folder of client photos.

The better question isn’t “is it free?” but “what happens to my file after it arrives?” If the answer is “a copy sits on someone’s server,” that copy is a liability you didn’t choose.

What to check before you send a large file

  • Does it need an account? Every account is another login to manage and another database holding your data.
  • Where does the file live afterwards? The safest answer is “nowhere” — it should be gone once delivered.
  • Who can open it? If the provider can read your file, so can anyone who gets into the provider.
  • How long does the link last? Links that never expire are leaks waiting to happen.

Free ways to send large files, compared

Email attachmentTypical transfer linkJustDrop
Handles large filesNo (25MB cap)YesYes
No account neededYesOften requiredNever
File stored on a serverYesDays to weeksNever
Provider can read itYesYesNo
Deletes itself after deliveryNoNoYes

Email is fine for tiny attachments but caps out fast. General transfer links handle size but leave copies behind. A room-and-code transfer keeps the speed without the leftovers — see how it stacks up against the best-known name in our WeTransfer alternative guide, or learn the broader approach in how to send files securely.

Frequently asked

How can I send a large file for free without signing up?
Open a private room in your browser, drop the file in, and share the short code with the other person. They type the code into any browser and the file lands on their device — no account, app, or payment needed.
Is it safe to send large files through a free service?
It depends on what happens to the file afterwards. Choose a tool that scrambles the file on your device before sending and erases it once delivered, so no readable copy is left on a server.
What is the easiest way to send a big video or photo folder?
Skip email size limits entirely by using a room-and-code transfer. You drop the folder in, share the code, and the other side downloads it directly — without compressing or splitting the files.