Host your student project

Coursework due tomorrow? Drop the zipped project or a single .html file and hand in a live link instead of a folder of code nobody opens.

Drag & drop your file here

or — zip a folder, or drop a single page

A grader — or a future employer looking through your portfolio — reads a live link far more readily than a zip they have to download and run locally. Pagedrop turns a class project, hackathon build, or capstone into a real HTTPS page in seconds, handy for submitting an assignment, demoing in a group presentation, or dropping the link straight into your resume.

How to host a student project

1

Build as usual

Finish your project as a static build — plain HTML/CSS/JS, or the export from whatever framework your class uses.

2

Zip and drop

Zip the folder (keep index.html at the top) and drop it on the box above.

3

Submit the link

Paste the live link into your submission, slide deck, or resume — anyone can open it without installing anything.

Frequently asked questions

Does it support frameworks like React or Vue?

Yes, once built to static files — run your project's build command first, then zip and drop the output folder (often named build or dist). Server-side code and databases are not supported.

Can my professor open it without an account?

Yes. The link is public to anyone who has it — no sign-in required to view.

What if I need to fix a bug after submitting?

A new upload gets a new link, so update the version you submit if there is time, or keep both if you already turned it in and just want a corrected copy for your portfolio.

Is there a size limit for a bigger project?

Free sites hold up to 25 MB across 500 files, which covers most course projects; paid plans raise that to 100 MB or 500 MB if your build or its assets are heavier.