Download TikTok on iPhone
Save TikTok videos to your iPhone Camera Roll in HD. Free Safari tool, no shortcut setup, no app install. Works on every iOS version.
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How to download TikTok on iPhone to your Camera Roll
- 1
Copy the link from the TikTok app
Tap the share arrow under the video → Copy Link. A URL like vm.tiktok.com/… lands on your clipboard. You don't need to leave TikTok — you can swipe to Safari in a single gesture.
- 2
Open ttget.net in Safari
Safari specifically. Chrome on iPhone works too, but Safari integrates better with the system video viewer — the file opens inside the player and you can save it straight to your Camera Roll without extra steps.
- 3
Paste the link and tap "Download HD"
Long-press the input field → Paste. The video loads in a couple of seconds. On iPhone we automatically open the clip in the system player — that's needed because Safari, unlike Chrome on Android, doesn't "download files" as such; it streams them inline.
- 4
Tap Share → Save Video
When the video opens in the player, tap the Share icon (square with an arrow up) at the bottom. In the share sheet pick Save Video — the clip lands in the standard Photos app, inside the Videos album, just like anything you'd record yourself.
Why this approach works on iPhone
No shortcuts, no profiles
TikTok shortcuts break with every iOS update — Apple changes the share-sheet API often. Configuration profiles need certificate trust, which Apple actively discourages. Here you're using regular Safari and a regular Save Video action — nothing custom.
Works on any iOS
iOS 15, 16, 17, 18 — doesn't matter. Even an iPhone 8 stuck on iOS 16 handles it. As long as Safari opens, the site loads.
Lives in Camera Roll like normal video
The saved clip is indistinguishable from one shot on the camera: send it through iMessage, post to Reels, trim it in the built-in editor. And — obviously — there's no TikTok logo on it.
Common questions about iPhone
Where exactly does the video go?
Into the standard Photos app, in the Videos album (or Recents). From there you can send it through iMessage, post to Reels or Instagram Stories, AirDrop it — same as any video from your Camera Roll.
Why doesn't Safari just "download"?
Apple's policy: Safari on iOS doesn't treat video as a downloadable document the way Chrome on Android does. So we open the file in the system player, and from there Apple's own Save Video action puts it in Photos correctly.
What about Chrome on iPhone?
Chrome on iOS is the same WebKit engine as Safari (Apple bans other engines), just with a different UI. It works, but Safari is slightly smoother for this exact flow — the Share sheet appears more reliably.
Video saved without sound — what now?
Check the iPhone's silent switch — sometimes Photos respects it on first preview. The audio track is in the file; we never strip it. Open the video in Photos and check the volume slider.
Can I queue several videos in a row?
Yes, the steps repeat per video. Each one requires its own Share → Save Video tap. For bulk work it's much easier from a computer — files just pile into the Downloads folder without taps.
What if it's a photo carousel, not a video?
Go to the photo download page and paste the same link. You'll get a ZIP — Safari handles ZIP archives through the Files app.
Does this work on iPad or iPod Touch?
iPad — yes, identically. iPod Touch — only if it's on iOS 15 or newer. iPad has a bonus: you can open ttget.net in Split View next to TikTok web and skip the app switch entirely.
Is Android easier?
Actually yes — on Android the file lands directly in /Downloads, no Share → Save Video dance. See the Android guide for that flow.
No app to install, no configuration profile to trust, no shortcut to maintain. Just Safari and Apple's own Save Video action — the exact same flow Apple uses across all of iOS for saving media.