How to download a video from Facebook | Mashable

How to download a video from Facebook

It's simple
Screenshot from Facebook Watch with the "save video" option highlighted.
A step-by-step guide to downloading a video from Facebook. Credit: Screenshot / facebook

Facebook is booming with videos: educational videos teaching you to garden or code, those addicting and useless 5-minute craft videos, the very visibly faked videos of people catching their partners cheating on them, aliens caught on film. If there is a craving for content, that content is likely on Facebook in video form.

If you want to share that video, you can copy the link and send it to a friend, or DM it to them through the app. You can save the video, but that doesn’t actually save the video to your phone or computer's hard drive — instead, it adds the video to your saved video bookmarks so you can find it easier and watch it later on Facebook. Sometimes, though, a video is simply too brilliant or helpful to not have saved onto your phone. Maybe you want to show a parent, or access it when you’re offline. In order to download a video from Facebook, you’ll have to follow through with a few steps.

Before we get started, it’s important to note that you should hesitate before downloading just any video. You don’t want to download copyrighted content, and if you want to download a friends’ privately uploaded video on Facebook, you may just want to ask them if it’s OK before you go through the trouble of downloading. Hey, maybe they’ll just send it to you.

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Total Time
  • 2 min
What You Need
  • Desktop or laptop
  • Facebook account

Step 1: Pick a video.

Find a video you want to save.

Screenshot of a crafts video on Facebook Watch.
A screenshot of the 5-minute crafts video on Facebook we want to download. Credit: SCREENSHOT / FACEBOOK

Step 2: Copy the link.

Click the three dots at the top right corner of the video, and then copy the link.

Screenshot from Facebook Watch with the "save video" option highlighted.
You'll need to copy the link of the Facebook video in order to download it. Credit: Screenshot / facebook

Step 3: Paste that link into a new tab.

Paste the link you copied into a new tab to navigate to that site.

Screenshot of a Facebook Watch video and comments.
Once you copy that link, paste it into a new tab. Credit: SCREENSHOT / FACEBOOK

Step 4: Delete "www" in the url and change it to "mbasic."

In the link, delete the "www" and change it to "mbasic." This will turn your site into a very retro version of Facebook.

Screenshot of a Facebook Watch video as the URL is changed from "www" to "mbasic."
You'll have to edit your url to go to a very old-school version of Facebook, now. Credit: SCREENSHOT:FACEBOOK

Step 5: Open the video in a new tab.

This will now be a single video on a black screen.

A screenshot of a Facebook video as a standalone on a page.
A screenshot of the Facebook video as a standalone on a page. Credit: SCREENSHOT / FACEBOOK

Step 6: Right click, and save the video.

Right click on the video, click save as, and boom! You’re done.

A screenshot of a Facebook video as a standalone with the "save" options open.
Now you've done it! All that's left is saving the video from Facebook onto your device. Credit: screenshot: facebook

There is an easier way, and it’s how you can also save it on a mobile device. You can download a video from Facebook in the same way you would download a video from Twitter: by copying the share link, and pasting that link into a third-party website designed to do all of that work for you. Once you have the tweet link copied, you'll want to go to a website like FB Down. There, you'll paste the copied link and click download. You can also download a third-party app like the Friendly for Facebook app, which gives the Facebook app extra features, including a downloading option.

If all else fails, you can always record your screen, play the video, and save that video to your phone or desktop that way. Screen recording is fairly simple, but it might not give you the same quality as saving the Facebook video independently.

Topics Facebook

Mashable Image
Christianna Silva
Senior Culture Reporter

Christianna Silva is a Senior Culture Reporter at Mashable. They write about tech and digital culture, with a focus on Facebook and Instagram. Before joining Mashable, they worked as an editor at NPR and MTV News, a reporter at Teen Vogue and VICE News, and as a stablehand at a mini-horse farm. You can follow them on Twitter @christianna_j.


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