How-to
How to Download Public Twitter Videos on Windows, Mac, Android, and iOS
Step-by-step instructions for checking public X/Twitter video download options on desktop and mobile devices with Get Videos.

Before you start
Make sure the post is public and that you have a legitimate reason to save it. Get Videos is for content you own, created, have permission to download, or are otherwise allowed to keep.
If the post is private, paid, deleted, region-blocked, or available only inside an account session, Get Videos should not be used to bypass that boundary.
Universal steps
- Copy the post link
Use the share menu or browser address bar to copy the public X/Twitter post URL.
- Open Get Videos
Go to get-videos.com and paste the link into the video URL field.
- Analyze formats
Review the recommended video with audio, silent HD video, and audio-only groups.
- Download only what you need
Choose the simplest format that matches your use case and keep attribution notes when appropriate.
Device notes
| Device | Where downloads often go | Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Windows | Downloads folder | Right-click and save if the browser opens the video instead of downloading it |
| Mac | Downloads folder or browser download shelf | Use the recommended video-with-audio option for easiest playback |
| Android | Downloads app or browser folder | Long-press links only when the browser does not show a direct save action |
| iPhone and iPad | Files app or Photos, depending on browser behavior | Use Share after the file opens if Save to Files appears |
Why formats look different
A public post can expose several media variants. Some are compact, some are higher quality, and some separate picture from sound. Get Videos labels these groups so you can avoid downloading a silent file by accident.
FAQ
Can I download public X videos on iPhone?
You can check public links in the browser. The exact save location depends on iOS, Safari or Chrome behavior, and the format returned by the source.
Do I need a different downloader for every device?
Usually no. A browser-based workflow works across modern devices when the public source provides a usable file.