Kutsitsa makanema, makanema, ndi zithunzi kuchokera ku 1,000 + masamba othandizira ndi API imodzi.One endpoint, mamiliyoni a ma platforms, mayankho a JSON omwe angaganizidwe.
import requests
response = requests.post(
"https://api.downloader.org/api/v1/submit/",
headers={"Authorization": "API_KEY"},
json={"url": "URL"},
)
for item in response.json()["items"]:
print(item["type"], item["url"])
Mafunso Ofunsidwa Kawirikawiri
Paste any public Facebook URL into the box at the top of this page and click Download. Your file is ready in a few seconds — no signup, no install.
Facebook is a social-media platform — posts mix video, image, and text, and most accounts mix public + private content. Public posts download cleanly; private ones don't.
No — Downloader doesn't sign in to Facebook. Anything Facebook serves publicly can be downloaded without authentication on either side.
Facebook hosts a mix of content types. Each download comes back in MP4 and JPG — the format matches the asset you actually link to.
Yes. We pass through whatever Facebook serves — no re-encoding, no recompression, no resolution downgrade. What you see playing on Facebook is exactly what you download.
One thing to know about Facebook: Videos arrive as a single combined file even though the platform serves them in segmented DASH streams behind the scenes.
No. Facebook sees a normal page-load request; the poster receives no notification. Downloads are anonymous from the platform's perspective.
Yes. Open Downloader in your mobile browser, paste a Facebook link, and tap Download. The file saves to your Photos / Files / Music app — no separate app required.
Processing on our side is constant — typically under a second. Actual download time after that depends on the file size and your internet connection.
Free accounts have a daily download cap (counted across all platforms, not just Facebook). Pro accounts remove the cap entirely and add priority processing.
Most Facebook downloads are for offline use — viewing on flights, building local playlists, sharing with friends who don't use the platform.
Downloading content you have the right to save — your own posts, content released under an open license, public-domain material — is standard fair use in most jurisdictions. For anything else, respect copyright and Facebook's terms.