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Extract RAR archives.

Open RAR archives in your browser — files out, no apps.

No uploads — 100% local No ads Free & open source

Drop RAR archives here

or browse your files

Files never leave your device. Everything runs in your browser, nothing touches a server — tools you've used even work offline.

Someone sent a .rar and Windows just shrugs. Drop it here instead: every file inside becomes its own download, straight in your browser — RAR v4 and v5, password-protected ones too. No WinRAR trial, no sketchy installer, no upload to a stranger with a server.

How it works

  1. Drop files anywhere on the page, click to browse, or paste with ⌘V.
  2. Pick a quality or preset — or set an exact target size and let the tool find it.
  3. Compress, compare before/after, and download — individually or as a ZIP.

Out of RAR, into anything

Extraction gives you the files; sometimes you want them back in an archive that opens everywhere. RAR to ZIP does exactly that in one step. The archive tool is the general-purpose version of this page — every format, create and extract, one place.

Frequently asked questions

Do password-protected RARs work?

Yes — enter the password in the panel and the archive decrypts locally, including RAR5 archives with encrypted file names. A wrong password gets a clear message, not a folder of corrupted files.

Is this legal without WinRAR?

Completely. RAR decompression is freely licensed — that is why 7-Zip and every unarchiver can open RARs. Only CREATING rar files requires WinRAR, because the compressor is proprietary.

What about multi-part archives (.part1.rar, .r00)?

Multi-volume sets need every volume present at once, which browser file handling does not guarantee — single-file archives are the supported case. Join the set with a desktop tool once, then any single .rar works here.

Is it private?

Yes. The archive is opened and unpacked on your own device — its contents are never uploaded, and a password, if one is needed, is used locally and never transmitted. The server does nothing but deliver this page. Want proof? Run one file through, switch your connection off, and run another — it still works.