Send a 100 GB file.
100 GB is twenty times the quik.space single-file ceiling. At this size, the honest recommendation is usually to ship a physical drive by courier, since the upload alone takes most of a day on a typical home line. If shipping is not an option, splitting into twenty chunks under 5 GB and sending them through quik.space at $5 apiece works, but bookkeeping becomes a real cost. Dedicated transfer services with chunked uploads are built for this regime.
Drop your 100 GB file.
5 GB is the per-file cap. Split larger files first.
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.
How to send a 100 GB file
- Drop the file on the quik.space drop zone above.
- The drop zone refuses single files over 5 GB. Split with 7-Zip, Keka, or split, then drop each chunk.
- Copy the share link when the upload finishes and send it to the recipient.
How long does a 100 GB upload take?
| Connection speed | Estimated upload time |
|---|---|
| 10 Mbps | 1d 5h |
| 50 Mbps | 5h 57m |
| 100 Mbps | 2h 58m |
| 1 Gbps | 17m 54s |
Estimates assume 80% of theoretical throughput to account for protocol overhead. Real-world times vary with Wi-Fi quality and other traffic on the line.
What can you fit in 100 GB?
- A multi-month video production archive with all source footage
- A complete client deliverable, master plus every working file
- A research dataset with images, models, and metadata combined
- A studio session library covering an entire album cycle
- A virtual production volume capture, weeks of recorded takes
What does it cost?
100 GB is past the quik.space single-file cap of 5 GB. The recommended approach is splitting the file into chunks under 5 GB with a tool like 7-Zip on Windows, Keka on macOS, or split on Linux, and sending each chunk separately. The recipient rejoins them with the same tool.
Full SKU table on the pricing page.
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
- Can quik.space send a 100 GB file?
- Not as a single send. The cap is 5 GB per file. A 100 GB transfer requires twenty chunks under 5 GB and that is operationally heavy enough that a different tool is usually the better answer.
- What is the best way to send 100 GB?
- A few honest options. First, an external drive shipped via courier is often the fastest and most reliable for a one-off, since at home internet speeds the upload alone takes most of a day. Second, a peer-to-peer transfer tool between two reachable endpoints. Third, a paid service with chunked uploads if you cannot ship a drive.
- How long does a 100 GB upload take on a typical line?
- On 100 Mbps upstream, around 2h 58m. On 50 Mbps, close to 6 hours. On 10 Mbps, over a day. The download takes a comparable amount of time on the recipient's line, plus disk write throughput as a secondary bottleneck.
- Why does sneakernet beat the internet at this size?
- A consumer NVMe SSD can write 100 GB in a couple of minutes. Even a budget external SSD can move 100 GB in under an hour. A typical home upload, by contrast, runs for hours. For one-time transfers and short physical distances, shipping a drive is unbeatable on time.
- If I do split a 100 GB file, what should I watch out for?
- Manifest discipline. Number the chunks clearly, send them all in one batch, and verify with a checksum of the original on the recipient's end. Losing one chunk in twenty wastes the whole effort.