Direct local sharing, refined

Move files across your devices without the friction.

LocalDrop is a modern nearby sharing app for Android, iPhone, Windows, macOS, and Linux. Send files, folders, photos, videos, and text directly over your local network with receiver approval and a clean, focused interface.

Current release 1.0.0
Release date April 7, 2026
Platforms Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, Linux
Modern release hub

One place for every LocalDrop build

Compare store releases, direct downloads, and desktop builds in one polished page. Update the placeholders once, then publish to GitHub Pages or your own domain.

Receiver approval Built in
Transfer scope Local network
Content types Files, folders, media, text
Download options Stores and direct builds
Store Releases Unavailable
  • Google Play build v1.0.0
  • App Store build v1.0.0
  • Desktop packages Windows, macOS, Linux
Direct path No relay in the middle
Receiver control Every incoming transfer can be accepted or declined
Cross-platform One experience across phone and desktop devices
Release ready Made for GitHub Pages, Google Play, and App Store linking

Download LocalDrop

Store versions and direct builds

Latest public version 1.0.0
View GitHub releases

Why people choose LocalDrop

Built to feel calm, quick, and dependable

Fast local discovery

LocalDrop is designed to find nearby devices on the same network and keep the send flow close to the content you choose.

Receiver approval

Incoming transfers are not silently accepted. The receiver stays in control, with clear accept and decline actions.

Broad content support

Send files, folders, photos, videos, text notes, or clipboard content from a single interface.

History and diagnostics

Review completed transfers, inspect progress, and reopen received content with a cleaner troubleshooting path.

Modern cross-platform feel

Android, iPhone, Windows, macOS, and Linux each get a focused experience without losing the shared LocalDrop identity.

Ready for publishing

This page is structured for release channels, store badges, policy links, and professional announcement copy.

Platform support

One brand, multiple release channels

Android

Google Play and APK

Offer a clean store install for most users and a direct APK link for testing, sideloading, or staged rollouts.

iPhone and iPad

App Store and .ipa

Keep iPhone and iPad downloads focused on a clean App Store install path for public releases, with an optional `.ipa` package for sideloading and internal distribution.

Windows

Installer and portable builds

Publish the latest desktop package with a short platform note, version stamp, and architecture details.

macOS and Linux

Native desktop downloads

Offer direct macOS packages and Linux downloads like AppImage and .tar.gz while keeping the release story consistent and easy to scan.

How it works

A clearer transfer flow

01

Choose what to send

Pick files, folders, photos, videos, or text from a focused sender experience.

02

Select a nearby device

LocalDrop surfaces compatible devices and keeps the discovery feedback close to the action.

03

Receiver confirms

The receiving device reviews the request and decides whether to accept it.

04

Transfer completes locally

Progress, status, and history stay easy to follow without turning the interface into a dashboard.

FAQ

Questions people usually ask

What can I download from this page?

This page can include the latest LocalDrop releases for Android, iPhone, Windows, macOS, and Linux, along with store links and direct desktop downloads.

Where should I install LocalDrop from?

If a store version is available for your device, that is usually the easiest option. Direct download links are useful for desktop releases, testing, or manual installs.

Will every platform have the same version number?

Not always. LocalDrop releases can ship on different schedules across stores and desktop packages, so each platform may show its own latest available version.

Which devices does LocalDrop support?

LocalDrop is designed for Android, iPhone, Windows, macOS, and Linux. Availability depends on which public store build or direct package is currently published.