Share videos with your people.
Not the internet.

Meant for a handful of people — not a feed. You send them a link; it plays on any phone, in any browser, without an account or an "open in app."

The other tools don't fit this job.

Try sending a three-minute kid video to a handful of relatives and watch where it goes wrong. YouTube treats it as broadcast material and wraps the clip in ads. Vimeo has a free tier, but the storage cap fills up after a few minutes of phone-recorded video, and the paid plans are priced for professionals. Google Drive asks your relatives to download the file before they can watch — if their phones let them at all. Each option gets most of it right and the rest wrong in a way that matters.

Airclip is the option that didn't exist yet: a plain link, a real video player, and no audience attached. It's paid for by a small group of people chipping in, not by ads or a pitch deck.

How it works.

1

Upload

Drop in a video. We do the boring parts — transcoding, a decent player, captions if you want them.

2

Share the link

Send it to the people who should see it. No account needed on their end. Opens in any browser.

3

They watch

The link opens in a browser and plays. There's no app to install, no account to make, and no autoplay into the next video.

Things we're never building.

Nothing on the list below is in the backlog. None of it will appear later behind a tier or a toggle. The whole point of the service is that these aren't here.

  • No ads — ever
  • No feeds
  • No follows
  • No recommendations
  • No comments or likes
  • Nothing trained on your videos

See how we compare to YouTube, Vimeo, and Google Drive →

Send your first video.

Sign in with Google and try Airclip on whatever video you were going to send somewhere anyway.