How to Transfer Files from Phone to PC Without a USB Cable (2026)

·7 min read

No cable. Wrong cable. Cable that only charges but won't transfer data (yes, those exist and they're everywhere). Whatever brought you here, the good news is that in 2026 a cable is the least convenient way to move files between your phone and your computer. Here are the methods that work with nothing but a browser — plus when each one makes sense.

Quick Answer:

The fastest cable-free method that works on any phone and any computer: open speedyshare.app in your phone's browser, upload the files, then enter the 6-digit code on your PC to download them. No app, no account, no same-Wi-Fi requirement, and everything auto-deletes after 30 minutes.

Send your files right now

Free, no account, no install. Files auto-delete after 30 minutes.

1. Browser Transfer (Works on Everything)

Browser-based transfer needs zero setup on either device, which makes it the default answer for a one-off transfer — especially on a work PC where you can't install software.

With SpeedyShare:

  • 1.On your phone, open speedyshare.app and tap the upload button to pick your files
  • 2.On your PC, open speedyshare.app and enter the 6-digit code (or open the QR link)
  • 3.Download — the files arrive at original quality, and everything is automatically erased after 30 minutes

Because it uses session-based temporary cloud storage rather than a direct device connection, it works when the phone is on mobile data and the PC is on office Ethernet — the scenario that breaks most "wireless transfer" apps.

2. Windows Phone Link / Intel Unison

Microsoft's Phone Link pairs an Android phone with Windows and can copy photos across. It's decent once configured, but setup involves signing in on both sides, granting a long list of permissions, and it's Android-to-Windows only — no iPhone-to-PC file transfer, and nothing for Macs.

3. Cloud Drives (Google Drive, OneDrive, iCloud)

Upload from the phone app, download from the browser on your PC. Works everywhere, but you need an account, uploads count against your quota, and sensitive files linger until you remember to delete them. Best for files you actually want to keep in the cloud, not for a quick handoff.

4. Local-Network Apps (LocalSend, Snapdrop)

Fast on a good home Wi-Fi, but both devices must be on the same network — which fails on client-isolated office and hotel Wi-Fi — and LocalSend needs an app installed on both sides. See our comparisons of Snapdrop alternatives and ShareDrop alternatives.

Skip the cable — transfer now

Phone to PC in your browser. No app, no account, auto-deletes after 30 minutes.

Try SpeedyShare Free →

Which Method Should You Use?

ScenarioBest method
One-off transfer, any devicesSpeedyShare (browser)
Work PC where you can't install appsSpeedyShare (browser)
Daily Android ↔ Windows photo syncPhone Link
Files you want to keep long-termCloud drive
Huge files, same home Wi-Fi, app OKLocalSend

FAQ

Can I transfer files without Wi-Fi at all?

Yes — browser transfer works over mobile data too. The phone and PC don't need to share any network; each just needs an internet connection.

Why won't my USB cable transfer files?

Many bundled cables are charge-only (they lack data wires). Even with a data cable, Android needs "File transfer" mode selected and Windows needs working MTP drivers — a common failure point.

Is browser transfer safe for private files?

With SpeedyShare, files are stored briefly in temporary cloud storage, are only reachable through your session's 6-digit code, and are automatically erased after 30 minutes.

Looking for a step-by-step device guide? See our pages on Android to PC file transfer and iPhone to Windows photo transfer.