Mega Downloader 1.8 Review

JDownloader 2 is actually a better, safer alternative if you need to bypass limits—but it’s heavier and more complex. Mega Downloader wins on simplicity for one specific task: downloading large public links. Final Verdict: Should You Use It in 2026? Yes, but with caution and only for public links.

Rating: 7.5/10 Value: 9/10 (it’s free, and nothing free works this well for its niche) Safety: 5/10 (use at your own risk) Last tested: January 2026 – Still functional against current MEGA infrastructure.

If someone shares an entire MEGA folder (containing subfolders and files), Mega Downloader parses the link, preserves the folder structure, and downloads everything with one click. No need to select files one by one. mega downloader 1.8

For years, MEGA.nz has been a go-to cloud storage service, but its free tier comes with a notorious pain point: strict bandwidth limits and clunky browser-based downloads. Enter —an unofficial, lightweight desktop client designed to bypass many of these limitations. After extensive testing, here’s an honest, deep-dive review. What Mega Downloader 1.8 Does Well (The Pros) 1. No Bandwidth Throttling (The Killer Feature) MEGA’s web client typically limits free users to around 5GB of downloads every 6 hours. Mega Downloader 1.8 effectively circumvents this by using a different API approach. You can queue up 50GB of files, leave it running overnight, and it will slowly but steadily work through them without hitting a hard stop. Caveat: It’s not unlimited speed—it just avoids the artificial cutoff.

In real-world tests (100Mbps connection), it consistently saturates your bandwidth, often matching or exceeding MEGA’s own browser-based download speeds—sometimes faster because it doesn’t rely on JavaScript decryption overhead. Where It Falls Short (The Cons) 1. The “Outdated” Look The interface is stuck in 2010. Grey boxes, basic buttons, and a clunky URL input field. It’s functional but feels abandoned. There’s no dark mode, no modern progress indicators (just a classic progress bar), and no tabbed browsing. JDownloader 2 is actually a better, safer alternative

, do not treat it as a permanent, secure solution. Use a VPN if privacy matters, never store login credentials in the software, and scan every downloaded file with an antivirus.

Mega Downloader 1.8 is a classic example of “abandonware that still works perfectly.” If you frequently download large archives, video collections, or backup files from MEGA’s free tier, this tool is almost essential. The bandwidth limit bypass alone makes it worth having. Yes, but with caution and only for public links

This is the big one. Mega Downloader is not an official MEGA product. The last official version (1.8) was released years ago, and the developer is anonymous. While virus scans on VirusTotal typically come back clean, you are entering your MEGA account credentials (if you choose to log in) or at least downloading files through unverified code. Some antivirus software flags it as “hacktool” due to its bandwidth-bypassing nature.

Casual users, security-conscious professionals, or anyone wanting to upload/sync files.

If you have two-factor authentication (2FA) enabled on your MEGA account, Mega Downloader 1.8 may struggle or fail to log you in. It was built before 2FA became standard. You can use it without logging in (for public links only), but then you lose access to your own cloud drive.