Clipcroft vs ToffeeShare

ToffeeShare is one of the cleanest peer-to-peer file-sharing tools on the web — browser-only, WebRTC-based, no signup, no size limit, end-to-end encrypted via DTLS 1.3. It and Clipcroft are the closest direct match in shape on the entire "online clipboard" / "P2P file transfer" SERP. The differences aren't whether the basic transfer works — both do that well — but whether you also want a clipboard, a history, multiple separate workspaces, password protection, idle auto-lock, and a multi-receiver fan-out.

TL;DR. Use ToffeeShare for one-off P2P file transfers where the minimalist UI is the point. Use Clipcroft when "send a file" is part of an ongoing workflow that also needs text sync, history, multiple clipboards, password-protected sessions, and the ability to send once and have it land on every connected device.

ToffeeShare vs Clipcroft

Feature ToffeeShare Clipcroft
Browser-only on every platformYesYes
WebRTC peer-to-peerYesYes
End-to-end encryption (transport)DTLS 1.3DTLS via WebRTC
Application-layer E2E (user-derived key)NoOptional clipboard password (PBKDF2 + AES-GCM)
Encrypted at rest in localStoragen/a (no persistence)Yes (when password set)
No signup / no installYesYes
Real-time text clipboard syncFile transfer onlyYes (live across all devices)
Persistent local clipboard historyNo (close tab to end)Yes (7 days, configurable)
Categorised bulk exportNoTexts / URLs / Files
Multi-device live fan-out (>2)Share-link basedUp to 20 devices, parallel WebRTC pipes
Multiple clipboards per deviceNo (one share session)Yes
Idle auto-lock (AutoForget)NoYes (configurable)
Multi-file queue with retry / cancel / resumePer-transferYes
File size limitNoneNone per file
FreeYes (ad-supported; ad-free for donors)Yes — unlimited GB, ad-supported

Note: third-party feature details change. The summary above reflects what was publicly documented at the time of writing.

Where ToffeeShare wins

Where Clipcroft wins

Use-case recommendations

Use ToffeeShare when: you want the smallest possible UI for a one-off file send.

Use Clipcroft when: you need a clipboard (text + files), you want to send one file to many devices at once, you want persistent local history with bulk export, you want an optional encryption layer with a user-chosen password, or you want multiple separate clipboards per device.

Frequently asked questions

What is ToffeeShare?

ToffeeShare is a free peer-to-peer file-sharing service from the Netherlands. It runs in the browser, uses WebRTC to send files directly between devices, has no size limit, requires no account or install, and documents end-to-end encryption via DTLS 1.3. The data isn't stored online — close the browser tab and the share ends.

Is ToffeeShare end-to-end encrypted?

Yes. ToffeeShare uses WebRTC's built-in DTLS 1.3 transport encryption, with the keys negotiated browser-to-browser. No relay server sees the contents. Clipcroft also uses WebRTC for transport, and adds an optional application-layer encryption with a user-chosen password — keys are derived in the browser via PBKDF2, so everything is encrypted with AES-GCM before it leaves the browser: on the wire, on the relay, and in local storage. The application-layer key never leaves the user's browsers, and is not derived by the browser itself.

Does ToffeeShare have a clipboard history?

No. ToffeeShare is built around one-shot file transfers — pick a file, share the link, done. Once the browser tab closes, the share ends and there's no record. Clipcroft keeps thousands of items per clipboard, organised into Texts / URLs / Files sections, with bulk operations and a configurable retention TTL.

Can I send to more than one receiver at once with ToffeeShare?

ToffeeShare shares a file through a download link and doesn't document a multi-device clipboard or one-to-many fan-out. Clipcroft supports up to 20 connected devices on the same clipboard, with a single drop reaching all of them via parallel WebRTC pipes from one sender — a 1 GB file is read and encrypted once, then streamed in parallel to every device.

Does ToffeeShare work between mobile and desktop?

Yes — ToffeeShare runs in any modern browser including mobile browsers. Clipcroft has the same browser-only model. The differences aren't "which devices" but "what the experience is like once both devices are connected" — Clipcroft adds real-time text sync, history, and multi-device fan-out.

Which one should I use?

Use ToffeeShare for one-off file transfers between two devices where you want a minimal UI, no signup, no install, and end-to-end encryption. Use Clipcroft when you also want a real-time text clipboard, the ability to reach 20 devices at once with a single drop, persistent local history with bulk export, or multiple separate clipboards per device.

Try Clipcroft for real-time multi-device clipboard sync with history.

Open Clipcroft