SaveHub provides a Twitter video downloader workflow for users who still search for Twitter video downloads, even though many links now resolve through X. Paste a public Twitter or X video post link into the main SaveHub downloader on the homepage and save the video as an MP4 file through your browser.
This page focuses on the Twitter search intent: people often have an older twitter.com URL, a shared tweet link, or a browser bookmark that still uses the Twitter name. The same practical rule applies: the link should open one public post that contains a playable video. General timelines, profiles, comment pages, search results, and protected posts are not reliable inputs.
Many historical Twitter links redirect to X. SaveHub treats the input as a public video post URL, so both twitter.com and x.com style links can be useful when they resolve to the same public video post. If the URL changes after opening it in a browser, copy the final post URL and use that version.
A good link opens one post, shows a playable video, and does not require special account permissions. A weak link opens a profile, timeline, list, search page, reply chain, or post that is no longer public. If the source page asks for permissions or does not show the video in a normal browser session, SaveHub may not be able to process it.
SaveHub prepares supported Twitter video downloads in MP4 format because MP4 is widely supported across iPhone, Android, Windows, macOS, tablets, and common media players. The available quality depends on the original post and the streams exposed by the source platform. If the source video is compressed, the downloaded file will reflect that source quality.
On mobile, copy the Twitter or X post link, open SaveHub in your browser, and paste the URL into the homepage downloader. On desktop, use the browser address bar or post share menu. After the file is saved, check Downloads, Files, the browser download panel, or your configured save location. Keeping the tab open until processing finishes helps avoid interrupted downloads.
If a Twitter video does not download, copy the link again from the original post and confirm that the video still plays publicly. Common causes include deleted posts, protected accounts, region restrictions, age restrictions, temporary source errors, browser blocking settings, and links that point to a page instead of a specific post.
This Twitter video downloader is the primary page for Twitter video saving and Twitter MP4 download searches. If your source link uses the X name, use the X Video Downloader. For TikTok links, use the TikTok Downloader.
A Twitter video downloader is useful when you have an older tweet URL, a shared link from a message, or a public post that you want to keep for offline viewing. Many people still describe these links as Twitter videos, so SaveHub keeps a dedicated page for that search behavior while still explaining how the X redirect affects the download workflow.
For the most reliable result, open the post before copying the link and make sure the video plays in the browser. Avoid copying URLs from embedded timelines, notification previews, search pages, or replies when the original post is available. A direct post URL helps SaveHub identify the right video and reduces failed processing caused by ambiguous page links.
Download only videos that you own, have permission to use, or are allowed to access under the platform's terms and applicable law. Public visibility does not automatically grant permission to repost, redistribute, monetize, or edit another creator's video.
SaveHub is designed for supported public Twitter and X video post URLs. Use the direct post link that contains the video.
No. SaveHub does not require your Twitter or X credentials. Private or restricted posts may still be unavailable.
Your browser controls the download location. Check Downloads, Files, or the browser download list on mobile.
The post may be private, removed, region-restricted, age-restricted, or temporarily inaccessible from the source platform.
Related tools: X Video Downloader, TikTok Downloader.