quik.spaceBack to drop

File sharing for video editors.

Your 3-minute ProRes 422 master is 2.8 GB. The director wants a link by EOD. quik.space accepts a single 5 GB file for $5, no transcode, no subscription, no asset-retention review. The reviewer clicks, scrubs the H.264 inline, pulls the master when they're done. Everything dies on a 72-hour clock by default, so no one has to remember to clean up the work-in-progress drive.

Drop a file.

Free under 100 MB. $1 up to 500 MB. $5 up to 5 GB. No signup, no AI training on your files.

or click anywhere to choose

No email means no recovery. If you lose this link, we can't get you back to this file.

Price scales with file count, up to 25 files. Shown once. 7-day expiry.

The video editor problem

A 90-second ProRes 422 master is already 1.5 GB. Frame.io is great until accounts and asset retention budgets become a director conversation. WeTransfer compresses your H.264 review cut into something the colorist won't accept, and a Google Drive folder forces every reviewer through a permission dance.

How quik.space fits in

quik.space passes ProRes through untouched. Upload a 4 GB master for $5, share the link, the reviewer downloads the exact bytes. The share page plays MP4 review cuts inline so the director can scrub before pulling the file. Anyone-with-the-link means the colorist, sound, and producer all get the same URL without an invite list.

An example workflow

  1. Export the cut from Premiere or Resolve. Use your master codec for the colorist, H.264 for the director's review. The share page will play H.264 inline.
  2. Drop the file on quik.space. Under 100 MB is free. ProRes masters land in the XL bracket: $5 up to 5 GB. The upload streams via tus so resumes survive a coffee break.
  3. Share the link in Slack or email. The reviewer clicks, watches inline, downloads if they need the master. No Frame.io account, no Drive request loop.

What you’ll typically send

File types video editors usually ship through quik.space:

  • ProRes 422 and ProRes 4444 masters
  • DNxHR and DNxHD intermediates
  • H.264 and H.265 review cuts
  • Premiere Pro and DaVinci Resolve project archives
  • Audio stems and OMF/AAF exports

Typical delivery size sits around 500 MB to 5 GB per cut. That maps to the free tier (under 100 MB), the $1 Large upload bracket (under 500 MB), or the $5 XL upload bracket (up to 5 GB). See pricing for the full table.

Private by default

quik.space does not train AI on your files. We do not read them. We do not index them. The file is visible only to whoever holds the share link, and it auto-deletes when the clock runs out. WeTransfer changed its terms in July 2025 to allow AI training on user files. We made the opposite call and put it in writing.

Frequently asked

Does quik.space recompress my video?
No. The bytes you upload are the bytes the reviewer downloads. ProRes, DNx, H.265, even old DV: nothing is transcoded server-side. The share page may stream a preview where the browser can, but the download is your original file.
What's the largest video file I can send?
5 GB per file. A 4-minute ProRes 422 HQ at 1080p sits around 4 GB, so that covers most short-form review masters. For a 30-minute documentary master, chunk by reel or export a DNxHR LB intermediate for review.
Will the share page play my MP4 inline?
Yes for H.264 and most H.265. ProRes and DNx don't play in browsers, so those download as files. If you want a play-in-browser proxy, export an H.264 next to the master and send both.
Can I send audio stems and the OMF together?
Yes. Zip the OMF/AAF and stem folder into one archive. quik.space accepts any file type up to 5 GB. If you go over 5 GB, split by reel.
Is there a download cap?
No bandwidth cap on the public link. Anyone with the URL can download as many times as they need during the 72-hour window (or longer if you extend).