Upload ISO Disk Images and Share via Link

Custom OS installers, recovery images, archived software discs — ISOs are huge and email-proof. A direct link handles them.

Upload ISO now

ISO files show up whenever whole discs or bootable media need to move: a customized Linux install image for a team, a recovery image for a specific machine model, archived driver discs for legacy hardware. They're also enormous — nothing email-borne handles them. Direct hosting gives IT folks and homelab people the obvious workflow: upload once, link from documentation, flash on demand.

How to upload a ISO file

  1. 1

    Upload the ISO at foldr.space

    Netinst and recovery images fit the 2GB Pro cap; full DVD images use Super Large upload.

  2. 2

    Copy the link into your docs or runbook

    A stable URL means the wiki page keeps working next year.

  3. 3

    Recipients download and flash

    Rufus, balenaEtcher, or dd — the downloaded image is byte-identical to your upload.

Drag-drop UI you might recognize

If you found this page by searching one of these phrases — yes, Foldr.Space does exactly that for ISO files:

  • Drop files here to upload
  • Drag files here to upload

Frequently asked questions

How do recipients verify integrity?

Publish the SHA-256 alongside the link (shasum -a 256 file.iso). Byte-identical hosting means checksums always match — if one doesn't, the download was interrupted, not the file changed.

Can I share Windows or macOS ISOs?

Share only what you have rights to distribute: your own builds, open-source OSes, freely redistributable images. Commercial OS images belong to their vendors — DMCA rules apply.

What's the size limit?

2GB per file on Pro covers netinst and most recovery images; full installer ISOs (4-8GB) go through the Super Large upload option.

Direct link for automation?

Yes — the URL is curl/wget-friendly, so provisioning scripts can pull the image directly.

Other file formats

Upload your ISO now

Drop the file, copy the link, send to anyone. No account required.

Upload a ISO