Share an Excel file as a link

Upload an .xlsx, .xls, or .csv to reshare and you get a short link, something like link.reshare.one/aB3xY9kLmn, that opens as a table right in the browser. The person you send it to needs no Excel and no account, and can download the original file whenever they want it. Free, up to 50 MB.

This page is for the spreadsheet you would otherwise attach to an email and hope the other side can open.

Drop your Excel or CSV file

Free. Sign in with Google and your link is ready in seconds.

How it works

  1. 01

    Drop the file

    Drag your .xlsx, .xls, or .csv into the box above, or click Choose a file.

  2. 02

    Sign in with Google

    One click. The file waits in your browser while you sign in, then the upload finishes on its own.

  3. 03

    Send the link

    It opens as a table on laptops and phones alike, with a download button for anyone who wants the file itself.

How to share an Excel file with someone

Email caps attachments around 25 MB, and every copy you send is frozen the moment you hit send. A link stays current: upload the workbook once, send the same short URL by email, Slack, or text, and when you upload a corrected version the link shows that instead. The view count in your dashboard tells you whether it was actually opened.

Open an Excel file without Excel

Nobody needs Office installed to read your numbers. The link renders the workbook as a table in the browser, and a workbook with several sheets gets a tab for each one. The original file stays one click away for anyone who wants to open it in Excel proper.

Sharing a Google Sheet

Google Sheets exports to Excel in one step: File, then Download, then Microsoft Excel (.xlsx). Upload that file and your data lives on a reshare link that opens for anyone, no Google account and no access requests.

What viewers see, and what they cannot do

The page shows the values in your cells, read only. Nobody can edit or fork it, and nobody sees comments, edit history, or collaborator names. When the point is "look at these numbers" rather than "work in this file", that is exactly enough, and the download button covers the rest.

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