Paste a TikTok share link and Social Clip Saver pulls the clean MP4 in seconds. Works for For You videos, Stories, photo slideshows, and live replays. No account, no app required for the web — but the Android app makes it one tap.
The fastest way is the Android app, but the web works the same. Pick whichever you have open.
On the TikTok video, look at the vertical button stack on the right edge — heart, comment, then a curved arrow (Share). Tap it.
Copy linkIn the share sheet, the second row has Copy link. Tap it once — TikTok confirms with a small toast at the bottom. (If you're on Android with our app installed, you'll also see Social Clip Saver in this same share sheet — tap that to skip the next step.)
Switch to this page, tap the input box, choose Paste. The URL looks like tiktok.com/@username/video/7… or the shorter vm.tiktok.com/…. Both work.
The result shows a preview thumbnail plus three buttons: HD MP4, Standard MP4, and Audio (MP3). Tap the one you want — the file downloads to your device's default Downloads folder, or directly to Photos on iOS Safari.
Most generic downloaders treat TikTok like any other video. We don't.
We fetch the underlying CDN file before the username overlay is composited in. The result is a clean clip — no creator handle pinned to the corner, no TikTok logo strobing in the middle.
TikTok's "photo mode" posts are slideshow carousels with a music bed. We package the still images plus the underlying audio so you get the whole post, not just one frame.
Saving as MP3 doesn't re-encode the audio. It demuxes the original AAC stream, so you keep the same fidelity TikTok uploaded.
The resolve usually completes in under two seconds. We don't run a queue, we don't artificially slow you down, and we don't show full-screen ads before the link works.
The TikTok URL stays in your browser memory for the duration of the request. Nothing is logged, nothing is shared with third parties, nothing is sold. We're a tool, not a tracker.
Install the app and TikTok's Share button will list Social Clip Saver alongside Messenger, WhatsApp, and the rest. One tap to save — no copy, no paste.
Stuff users have told us they wanted the tool for. None of these are media piracy.
Designers and stylists save references for future inspiration. Keeping a clean local copy means the reference survives if the creator deletes or makes the account private later.
Teachers grab short cooking, science, or language clips to embed in slide decks. Saved without watermark, the clip looks intentional inside a presentation instead of like a screen-record.
You can ask TikTok for an export, but it's slow. Saving your own past videos one-by-one to a local archive is faster, and you keep them at full quality.
Some people just don't want a TikTok account. Sending them the raw MP4 over WhatsApp or iMessage is a kinder way to share than forcing a download.
Sound designers grab short audio loops as MP3 for non-commercial reference. (Always check the sound's licence before any release.)
You've seen the others. Here's a straight read.
No. We extract the underlying file before TikTok's username overlay is composited in. The output is the clean original MP4.
Yes. No signup, no email, no token. Paste the share URL and the result appears in seconds. We don't store the link or the file.
Yes — any browser on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, or Linux. On Android the dedicated app makes it one tap from TikTok's Share button.
Yes. After the clip resolves, choose Audio only (MP3). We demux the original AAC stream — no quality-killing re-encode.
No. Only publicly viewable videos can be saved. If the creator's account is private or has restricted sharing, the link won't resolve.
Usually under two seconds from paste to download link. Bigger videos take longer to actually download, but resolution is near-instant.
Long-form like tiktok.com/@user/video/7…, share-sheet shortlinks like vm.tiktok.com/…, and embedded-player URLs. Paste whichever the Copy link button gave you.
Saving content for personal use, archival, or with the creator's permission is generally fine in most jurisdictions. Redistributing or monetising someone else's video without permission is not. You're responsible for following copyright law and TikTok's terms.
Live broadcasts in progress can't be downloaded — TikTok doesn't expose them as files. Once a live is replayed and posted as a normal video, it works like any other.