Share JPG Files Online
Photographers sending client proofs and content creators sharing high-resolution shots need the original file delivered, not a re-compressed version with visibly degraded quality and stripped EXIF data. fileshare.ing transfers your JPG exactly as shot or exported, with original metadata intact.
How to Share a JPG File
Drag & drop your file
Or click to browse. No size restrictions on free accounts — up to 2 GB.
Get a short link
fileshare.ing/f/abc is ready the moment your upload completes.
Share anywhere
Paste into email, Slack, Notion, or anywhere that accepts a URL.
Why Share JPG Files With fileshare.ing
Clients and collaborators get the original JPEG file — same resolution, same quality level, same EXIF data — via a direct download link with no account required and no platform re-encoding the file before delivery.
- Original EXIF metadata travels with the file — camera model, lens, aperture, shutter speed, GPS coordinates, and copyright fields are all preserved for the recipient.
- No re-compression: JPEG files are already lossy by design, and further encoding cycles degrade quality visibly. fileshare.ing transfers the file as-is.
- Free tier handles files up to 2 GB, covering even high-resolution medium format RAW-to-JPEG exports; links stay live for 7 days with no account needed.
About JPEG Image Files
JPEG is the native output format of virtually every camera, smartphone, and photo editing workflow — it is how photographers deliver proofs, how brands receive content from creators, and how editorial teams exchange high-resolution images. A typical 24-megapixel JPEG at high quality runs 8–15 MB; a medium format file or extensively edited commercial image can exceed 50 MB. The risk in sharing JPEGs through platforms not designed for asset delivery is silent re-compression — platforms serving images from their own CDN often re-encode for optimization, which introduces new compression artifacts on top of existing ones.
Compatible apps
Typical use cases
- •Delivering a wedding gallery proof set to clients before final album selection
- •Sharing high-resolution product photos with an e-commerce team for listing uploads
- •Sending editorial photos to a magazine or publication at original resolution and with caption EXIF data intact
- •Delivering brand photography to a marketing team across multiple agencies without a shared cloud storage setup
- •Transferring content creator deliverables to a brand client who needs original files for print and digital use
Pricing & Limits
Start free — no account needed. Upgrade when you need more.
| Feature | Anonymous | Free | Most popularStarter | Pro |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Account | Not required | |||
| Max file size | 100 MB | 2 GB | 10 GB | 50 GB |
| Storage total | 500 MB | 5 GB | 50 GB | 200 GB |
| Link expiry | 24 hours | 7 days | 90 days | Permanent |
| Price | Free | Free | $5 / mo | $12 / mo |
Related File Types
Frequently Asked Questions
- Will my EXIF data — camera settings, GPS, copyright — be preserved?
- Yes. EXIF metadata is stored inside the JPEG file itself, and fileshare.ing does not strip, modify, or parse it. Camera model, lens data, capture settings, GPS coordinates, and any copyright or creator fields you embedded in Lightroom or Capture One will be present in the downloaded file.
- Does fileshare.ing re-compress my JPEG before the recipient downloads it?
- No. This is one of the most important guarantees for photographers. JPEG is a lossy format — each encode cycle introduces additional artifacts. fileshare.ing stores the exact binary file you uploaded and delivers it unchanged. The quality level you set in your export is the quality level the client receives.
- Can I share RAW files (ARW, CR3, NEF) as well as JPEGs?
- Yes. fileshare.ing accepts any file format — RAW formats from Sony, Canon, Nikon, and other manufacturers upload and transfer without issue. The /share/jpg page is focused on JPEG delivery, but the same no-compression guarantee applies to RAW files, which are particularly sensitive to any modification.
- How do I send a full gallery of 500 photos — do I upload one at a time?
- For large batches, the most practical approach is to ZIP the gallery folder and upload the archive as a single file. This preserves your folder structure, generates one shareable link, and typically compresses the total size slightly. A ZIP of 500 JPEGs at 10 MB each would be around 4.5–5 GB — within Starter plan range at $5/mo.