Your download will begin in 15 seconds…
Direct file: /downloads/QuickList-Setup.exe
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Faster uploads, offline file queueing, and a native Desktop window. Your secure download will start automatically in a few seconds — leave this tab open while we prepare the latest signed installer.
Sponsored
Your download will begin in 15 seconds…
Direct file: /downloads/QuickList-Setup.exe
Sponsored
The desktop app wraps the full QuickList experience in a native Desktopwindow with extras you can't get in a browser tab. It's the same code you already trust, with a faster local pipeline and offline resilience.
Large files stream through a native HTTP/2 client instead of the browser's tab-bound transfer queue. Expect ~30% faster on multi-gigabyte uploads.
Drop files in while you're on a plane or a flaky network. The desktop app holds them in a local queue and ships them the moment you're back online.
Built and signed via Electron Forge. The installer ships from the same release pipeline as the production website, so what you get is exactly what we publish.
No tabs to lose, no accidental refresh, and your QuickList session stays open across system restarts.
Use QuickList Desktop as a guest just like the website — your existing public links and creator profile work seamlessly.
Every tool from the web — image conversion, PDF tools, dev utilities — runs locally inside the desktop shell.
Is the QuickList Desktop App free?
Yes. The desktop app is 100% free, just like the web app. It uses the same QuickList account and shares your existing data.
Why a 15-second wait before download?
The wait lets the CDN warm a signed install bundle for your platform and verifies the file hash before serving — it's a security pattern we use across all installer downloads.
Does the desktop app support offline mode?
Files dropped into the desktop queue stay local until your network is back. Uploads, sharing, and tool processing then resume automatically.
How do I uninstall?
Windows: Settings → Apps → QuickList → Uninstall. macOS: drag QuickList.app to the Trash. Linux: use your package manager.