Social media platforms are not designed with downloading in mind. They want you to stay in the app, come back for more, and keep engagement numbers up. A built-in download button would work against that. So they either skip it entirely or add one that stamps a watermark on everything, which is not particularly useful if you just want a clean file.
The good news is that this problem is solved. Web-based tools like MyVideoCity handle the actual download work on the server side and send you a clean file directly. No app to install. No account to create. You paste a link and it works. The following sections break down exactly how to do this on every device and platform that matters.
Downloading Videos Without Installing Any App
The simplest approach, and the one that works universally, is a browser-based downloader. You open a website, paste a video link, and download the file. The entire process happens in the browser you already have on your phone or computer. Nothing gets installed. Nothing runs in the background. When you are done, you close the tab and that is the end of it.
MyVideoCity is built this way. It handles TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, X (Twitter), Vimeo, and Reddit in one place. The interface is the same regardless of which platform you are downloading from. Paste the link, wait a few seconds for the tool to analyze it, pick your quality, and save. The file goes directly to your device's downloads folder.
The reason this works without an app is that video files are ultimately just files being served from a server. A web-based downloader acts as an intermediary — it fetches the video from the platform's servers and hands it to you in a format your browser can save. The platform sees a regular request; you get the video file.
How to Download Videos on iPhone
iPhone is where most people run into trouble, mainly because of how Safari handles file downloads. On Android, a video file downloads exactly like any other file — it lands in your Downloads folder and you play it from there. On iPhone with Safari, video files sometimes open in the browser instead of saving. This is a Safari quirk, not a problem with the downloader itself.
When a video opens in Safari instead of downloading, press and hold anywhere on the video until a menu appears. One of the options will say "Download Video." Tap that and the file saves to your Files app under the Downloads folder. This works consistently on iOS 14 and later.
The easier solution is to use Chrome on iPhone instead of Safari. Chrome handles downloads more predictably and does not have this behavior. The file saves directly when you tap the download link without any extra steps. If you switch between browsers regularly, Chrome is worth keeping as your download browser specifically for this reason.
One more thing worth knowing about iPhone: videos you download go to the Files app, not to your Photos app. This surprises people who expect to find it in their camera roll. To move it to Photos, open the Files app, find the downloaded video, tap and hold it, and choose "Save to Photos" from the menu. After that it appears in your camera roll like any other video.
How to Download Videos on Android
Android is significantly more straightforward. When you tap a download link through Chrome or most other Android browsers, the file downloads in the background and lands in your Downloads folder. A notification appears when it finishes. Open it from the notification or find it in your Files app or Downloads app.
The one step people sometimes miss on Android is finding the video afterward. Depending on your phone manufacturer and Android version, the Downloads folder might be inside a Files app, a My Files app (Samsung), or accessible through a file manager. Search for the filename or filter by file type (MP4) if you are not sure where it went.
Videos downloaded to your phone's storage are not automatically in your Gallery. Some Android phones add downloaded videos to the Gallery automatically, but others do not. If you want it in your Gallery or Google Photos, move the file using a file manager. On most phones you can long-press the file and choose "Move to" or "Copy to" and navigate to your DCIM folder or Pictures folder.
How to Download Reddit Videos with Sound
Reddit video downloads are a particularly common frustration. The main issue is that Reddit stores video and audio as separate files, and most basic downloader tools only grab the video track, leaving you with a silent clip. This is something people notice immediately and it is confusing if you do not know why it happens.
MyVideoCity's Reddit downloader handles this correctly by combining the video and audio tracks before sending you the file. The result is a proper MP4 with synchronized sound. You paste the Reddit post link the same way you would for any other platform, and the download includes both the video and the audio.
To get the Reddit link, open the post in the Reddit app or on reddit.com, tap the Share button, and select "Copy link." Paste that into MyVideoCity and the rest is automatic. If you are browsing Reddit on desktop, copy the URL from your browser address bar directly.
One thing to be aware of: Reddit posts where the video was originally uploaded from another platform, like an embedded X video or a YouTube clip, are not Reddit-hosted videos and behave differently. For those, you would use the original source link rather than the Reddit post link.
When a Video Refuses to Download — What Is Actually Happening
There are a few specific situations where a download will not work, and they all have the same basic explanation. If the content is not publicly accessible, no web downloader can retrieve it. Private accounts, friends-only posts, and content that requires being logged in to view are all genuinely restricted at the server level. The platform is not serving those files to anyone who is not authenticated.
If you try to download a public video and it fails, the most common causes are an outdated or malformed link, content that has been deleted since you first saw it, or a temporary error on the platform's side. Waiting a few minutes and trying again with a freshly copied link resolves the majority of these cases.
Geo-restricted content is another occasional issue. Some videos are only served in certain countries. If the video itself is blocked in your region, the downloader cannot work around that restriction because the file simply is not being made available to your connection.
Getting the Right Link — The Step People Most Often Get Wrong
Every platform has a specific way to copy the video link, and using the wrong type of link is the most common reason a download does not work. A profile page URL, a hashtag page, a search result, or a shared preview link will not work. You need the direct link to the specific video post.
On TikTok, tap the Share button on the video and choose "Copy link." On Instagram, tap the three dots on the post and choose "Copy link." On Facebook, tap the three dots on the post and select "Copy link." On X, tap the Share button on the post and choose "Copy link to post." On Reddit, use Share → Copy link on the post. On Vimeo, copy the URL directly from the browser address bar while viewing the video.
In each case the link should point to a single piece of content, not to a person's profile or a category page. If you paste a link and the downloader cannot find a video, that is almost always the issue — you are giving it a page that contains many videos rather than a link to one specific video.
Saving Videos for Offline Use Before You Travel
One practical use case that comes up often is downloading content before going somewhere without reliable internet. Long flights, camping trips, or traveling in areas with poor connectivity. If you know you will want to watch something offline, the time to save it is before you leave.
For this purpose, downloading in HD is always worth it when storage allows. A 1080p video takes more space but looks significantly better on a modern phone screen. Most videos you download will be somewhere between 30MB and 150MB depending on length and quality. A typical phone with 128GB of storage can hold hundreds of downloaded videos without the storage becoming an issue.
A Note on What You Download and How You Use It
Downloading a video for personal offline use is a reasonable thing to do and what most people are doing. Where things become more complicated is redistribution. Taking someone's video and reposting it on another platform, using it in a commercial project without permission, or presenting it as your own content all cross into copyright territory regardless of where the video originally came from.
MyVideoCity's Terms of Service are clear on this: the tool is for personal use. If you need to use someone else's content for a legitimate commercial purpose, the right approach is to contact the creator directly. Most creators are open to licensing discussions, and getting proper permission protects both sides.
For guides specific to each platform, see our detailed walkthroughs for downloading TikTok videos without watermark, saving Instagram Reels, downloading Facebook videos, getting videos from X (Twitter), and downloading Vimeo content in HD. Each one covers the specific quirks of that platform in more detail than this overview can.