How to download adult videos on your phone (iPhone & Android)
Watching on a phone is easy; keeping a clip is the awkward part — adult sites don't give you a save button, and the app stores won't carry a real downloader. The good news is you don't need an app at all. A browser-based saver like FSAVED turns a public video link into a file that lives on your own phone, ready to watch offline, on a flight, or anywhere a streaming page would be slow or awkward to load.
This guide covers exactly how it works on both iPhone and Android: the three steps, where the file actually ends up, how to pick a quality that won't eat your storage, and how to keep the whole thing private. Everything here assumes personal, offline use of publicly viewable videos — respect the consent and rights of the people in them and don't redistribute what you save.
Can you download adult videos on a phone?
Yes — and you don't need to install anything. FSAVED runs entirely in your mobile browser (Safari, Chrome, Firefox or Samsung Internet), so there's no app to find, no Play Store or App Store policy blocking it, and no permissions to hand over. You paste a link, pick a quality, and the video saves to your phone as a standard MP4 that plays in any video app.
It works the same on iOS and Android. The only real difference is where the saved file lands and how you move it into your gallery — which is exactly what the next two sections cover.
How to download a video to an iPhone or iPad
On iOS the file saves into the Files app rather than straight to Photos — that's just how Safari handles downloads. The flow is:
- Open the video on the adult site in Safari or Chrome and copy its link (tap and hold the address bar, or use the site's share button).
- Come back to FSAVED, paste the link into the box, and tap Download.
- Pick a quality — the file downloads and a small download arrow appears in Safari's toolbar.
- Tap that arrow (or open the Files app) and find the MP4 under Downloads.
- To add it to your camera roll, tap Share → Save Video and it moves into Photos.
How to download a video on Android
Android is a little more direct: saved files usually appear in your Downloads folder and show up in the gallery on their own.
Open the clip, copy its link, paste it into FSAVED and choose a quality. The MP4 lands in Downloads (or wherever your browser saves files), and most gallery and file-manager apps pick it up straight away. If you don't see it, open your Files or My Files app and look under Downloads.
Why there's no app — and why that's better
Apple and Google both keep adult-content and downloader apps out of their stores, so any 'porn downloader app' you find sideloaded is a gamble: unknown permissions, bundled ads, or worse. A browser tool sidesteps all of that — there's nothing installed that can run in the background, nothing reading your other files, and nothing showing up in your app list.
It's also more private. Because the download runs through FSAVED's servers rather than your phone, the source site never sees your phone's IP, and there's no app quietly logging what you saved.
Choosing the right quality on a phone
Higher resolution means a bigger file, and phone storage fills up fast. After you paste a link, FSAVED lists the qualities the video actually offers — for most clips that's 480p, 720p or 1080p, with 4K on some uploads.
On a phone screen 720p usually looks great and saves a lot of space versus 1080p or 4K; keep the top quality for videos you really want to archive or might watch on a TV. Every option comes down as an MP4, so it plays everywhere with no converting.
Watching offline and keeping it private
Once a video is saved it's fully offline — no signal needed, no buffering, no ads, and nothing to re-find later. Play it from your Files app, your gallery, or a player like VLC.
On privacy: FSAVED keeps no logs that tie a download to you, and the only record of what you saved is the on-device library in your browser, never on our servers — clear it in one tap. If you share your phone, saving into the Files app instead of the camera roll keeps clips out of the photo previews other people might scroll past.