Loom to MP4
Loom to MP4 — Download Any Loom Video Free
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Paste any public Loom share link and download the MP4 in 30 seconds. No signup, no account, no quality loss — original 720p or 1080p resolution preserved.
What happens next: We fetch your public Loom share page, extract the video URL, and load it in the player. You can watch it directly, or click "Download MP4" to save it locally. Nothing is stored on our servers.
Paste any public Loom share link and download the MP4 in 30 seconds. No signup, no account, no quality loss — original 720p or 1080p resolution preserved.
How it works
Paste your Loom share link
Copy the URL of any Loom video (it looks like loom.com/share/...) and paste it above.
Click "Get video"
We fetch the public Loom share page, extract the video URL, and load it in the player.
Watch or download
Watch the video right in the page, or click "Download MP4" to save it to your device.
Can you download a Loom video?
Yes — when the Loom video has a public share link, you can download it as MP4. Paste the share URL above and we pull the same video stream Loom's player uses, then save it as a standard MP4 file you control. Private, password-protected, and workspace-only Loom videos still require Loom authentication and are not bypassed. If you have a public share link from someone else's Loom, that link is sufficient — no Loom account needed on your side, no login, no credentials shared.
How do you download a Loom video as MP4?
Copy the Loom share link from any public video, paste it into the input above, click "Get video," then click "Download MP4" once the video loads in the player. The whole process takes 10-30 seconds depending on video length. The downloaded file is the original MP4 Loom serves, at 720p or 1080p depending on what the creator uploaded — no recompression, no watermark, no quality loss. The file is yours to keep forever, even if the original Loom is later deleted, moved to a workspace you can't access, or removed when a creator leaves Loom entirely.
Why Loom users download their videos in 2026
Three consistent reasons people save Loom videos in 2026. Backup before a Loom workspace disappears. Loom's free plan limits libraries to 25 videos at 5 minutes each. After Atlassian's acquisition, the Creator Lite tier was retired and pricing changed twice — older recordings quietly stop being playable once you cross the cap, and paid workspaces get deleted when companies switch plans or close. The only way to keep a permanent copy is to download your archive before it disappears. Sharing offline. A Loom share link needs internet, a browser, and Loom's player to work. An MP4 plays anywhere: Slack uploads, email attachments, USB sticks, AirDrop, presentations on planes, clients on flaky Wi-Fi, conference rooms with no internet, archived in a research library, watched on a plane in airplane mode. Re-editing in real video tools. Loom's editor only lets you trim. Once you have the MP4 you can drop it into iMovie, Final Cut Pro, Adobe Premiere, CapCut, Descript, or DaVinci Resolve for proper editing — color grading, audio cleanup, transitions, captions, exports for any platform. Migrating off Loom. After Atlassian's price changes, many teams are switching to alternative screen recorders like Screen Studio, Loom alternatives, or free options. Downloading your archive first means you can move to a new platform with your full library intact, not just the 25 most recent recordings. Compliance and audit. Many companies need to retain training videos, recorded meetings, and customer calls for compliance reasons. Loom's storage is convenient but doesn't satisfy most regulatory retention requirements — having local copies on controlled storage is standard practice.
How Loom stores videos and how we fetch them
Loom stores recordings as playlists of short media segments (HLS or DASH) on Cloudfront. Loom's player streams those segments one at a time, which is fine for playback but slow for downloads. Our tool parses the Loom manifest, picks the highest-quality variant available (usually 720p or 1080p), and downloads all the segments in parallel — typically 8-16 concurrent connections instead of Loom's serial stream. H.264/AAC streams are remuxed into a single MP4 without re-encoding, so quality is identical to what Loom's player delivers. WebM DASH streams are transcoded to H.264/AAC for compatibility with QuickTime, iMovie, Final Cut, Windows Media Player, and older Android devices. The output is a standard MP4 with H.264 video and AAC audio — the most universally compatible video format in 2026. Opens cleanly in any browser, any phone, any modern editor, any presentation tool. The container is MP4 (`.mp4` file extension), the video codec is H.264 (also called AVC), and the audio codec is AAC. This combination plays everywhere without conversion. For 4K or 60fps Loom recordings, the same process works — we just preserve the higher bitrate. File size scales with video length and quality: a 10-minute 1080p Loom comes out around 80-150 MB, a 30-minute one around 250-450 MB. Compressed against Loom's own storage size, it's about the same.
Privacy and how the file is delivered
Your Loom share URL is fetched once and not logged against any identity. The downloaded MP4 is delivered directly to your browser via our CDN and never touches our servers long-term. We don't keep copies of the videos or the URLs after your download completes — no archive, no history, no analytics tied to the content. If you're downloading your own Loom videos, your account is unaffected — Loom can't detect downloads through their public share URLs. The same URLs work in any browser's video player. If you're downloading someone else's public video, the same privacy applies: it's a one-shot fetch. The creator doesn't get notified, and the share URL is never exposed beyond our internal fetch. We don't require account creation. We don't require email. We don't place tracking pixels on the page. The only thing we save is a count of how many downloads have been processed total — to keep the service running — and we don't store URLs or video content.
Is downloading Loom videos with this tool allowed?
Downloading your own recordings, or videos a creator has explicitly made public via a share link, is fine — we only fetch public Loom media URLs that Loom's own player exposes. Downloading someone else's content without permission and republishing it is a copyright issue, not a tool issue. Use this for backup, archiving, and migration of videos you actually have rights to.
Will Loom ban me for using this downloader?
No. Loom can't detect downloads through their public share URLs — the same URLs work in any browser's video player. We support downloads via public Loom share URLs — the same URLs work in any browser's video player, and we use the same direct-fetch approach. The only thing that could trigger a Loom response is downloading password-protected or workspace-only content, which we deliberately don't support.
What quality and format do I get?
We serve the original file Loom provides for the public share URL. Typical output is MP4 with H.264 video (720p or 1080p, depending on what the creator uploaded) and AAC audio at 128 kbps. Some older Loom recordings are served in WebM/DASH — we transcode those to MP4/H.264 so the file opens cleanly in QuickTime, iMovie, Final Cut, Premiere, and Windows Media Player. The downloaded file has no watermark, no Loom logo, no added branding — just the original video.
What if the video is gone from my Loom dashboard?
If the video is still accessible via its public share URL, we can download it. If Loom has removed the share URL entirely (workspace deleted, video taken down, account suspended), we can't recover it. For Loom's own "video not found" errors, check that the share link is still active in a private browser window before pasting it here.
Can my team bulk-download our whole Loom library?
Bulk download is supported via the migration tool linked in the side panel. You can paste up to 20 public Loom share links at once and get 20 MP4 files back. For libraries larger than 20 videos, repeat the batch — there's no hard cap on total downloads, just on batch size. For private/workspace-only libraries, we don't have access — your admin would need to export from Loom directly (which requires a paid plan).