quik.spaceBack to drop

About quik.space.

Send any file in seconds. No signup. No ads. No AI training on your files. Just a link.

What we do

quik.space is a free file sharing service. You drop a file in the browser, you get back a short link, you send the link to whoever needs the file. There is no signup, no email gate, no password. The free tier covers files up to 100 MB and accepts up to three files in one request. Every free upload is kept for 72 hours by default, then enters a 7-day grace window for recovery, then the storage is permanently purged. If you want to keep a file alive longer, you pay two dollars to extend it by 30 days. If you want to send something bigger, single files between 100 MB and 500 MB cost one dollar, files between 500 MB and 5 GB cost five dollars, and a 25-file batch costs two dollars. A "space" is a 30-day group for multiple files under one expiry clock and costs five dollars. There are no subscriptions. Every payment is a one-shot purchase. AI agents get the same product through a Model Context Protocol endpoint and pay in USDC on Base via the x402 standard, so an agent can upload and extend files without any human in the loop. The site was built in 2026 by a small independent team. It runs on Next.js deployed to Vercel for the web app, Supabase Postgres and Storage for the data layer, Supabase Edge Functions for the API surface, and Stripe for card payments. The product is the file link. That is the whole product.

Why we exist

In July 2025 WeTransfer updated its terms of service to grant itself a license to use uploaded files for training machine learning models. The change was rolled back after public backlash, but the signal was clear. The default outcome for every mainstream file sharing service in this decade is the same: get acquired or pivot to subscription storage, then quietly change the terms so the files passing through the pipe can feed something else. WeTransfer was the pure-play link-based service most people used, and it now sells a productivity suite.

quik.space exists because there is a clean job-to-be-done underneath all of that consolidation. A person has one file and one recipient. They want a link they can paste into a chat. They do not want a folder, a workspace, an inbox, or a new account. They do not want their file to become a training row in someone else's model. quik.space does that one job and writes its limits on the wall. Files expire. Storage gets purged. We do not look at the contents. The terms cannot quietly flip on you because the product has nothing to flip into.

Who it is for

Photographers sending a 1.2 GB RAW set to a client without asking the client to make a Dropbox account. Video editors shipping a 4K cut to a producer over a flaky hotel Wi-Fi connection. Lawyers handing a sealed PDF to opposing counsel with a 72-hour expiry that doubles as a record. Developers moving a build artifact off a sandbox machine without installing an SDK. Designers sending a Figma export to a copywriter who does not have, and does not need, a Figma license.

And AI agents. An agent that runs research overnight and needs to drop a 40 MB report somewhere a human can read in the morning. An agent that produces a slide deck inside a shell tool and needs a public URL. An agent that fetches a spreadsheet, transforms it, and ships the result back to a Slack channel as a link. quik.space treats agents as first class users with the same product, the same prices, and a payment standard their stack already understands.

What we will not do

  • We do not train AI on user files.
  • We do not read the files you upload.
  • We do not sell ads or place advertising on share pages.
  • We do not track recipients across the web.
  • We do not require a signup for the free tier.
  • We do not keep files past their expiry date.
  • We do not charge subscriptions. Every payment is one-shot.

Stack

quik.space is a Next.js 16 application deployed to Vercel. The backend is Supabase Postgres with Supabase Storage on top of S3, and a set of Supabase Edge Functions for upload, share, extend, find, spaces, MCP, and the x402 verifier. Card payments go through Stripe. Transactional email goes through Resend. On marketing pages we use Microsoft Clarity and Google Analytics 4 for traffic understanding. There is no other third-party pixel and no advertising network. The same stack handles human web traffic and AI-agent MCP traffic, so the API surface and the web app stay in sync.

Contact

Email hello@quik.space for support, partnerships, security disclosures, takedown requests, and press. For routed support tickets see /support. For press materials, founder voice, and a one-paragraph boilerplate see /press.