Send documents that expire on their own
An offer letter, a bank statement, a signed contract, an ID. You often need someone to read a document, not keep it forever. An expiring document share lets them see it and then takes it back.
Documents are the files most people most regret sharing permanently. A contract forwarded on email sits in three inboxes. A statement sent on chat lives in someone's gallery and cloud backup. An ID copy ends up in a folder you will never see again.
The fix is to share the document so it can be read, not retained.
How an expiring document share works
- Add the document to Fliko (PDF, image, or a photo of a page).
- Choose view-only if you do not want it saved, or allow download if you do.
- Set a self-destruct timer.
- Share a link, a QR code, or a 6-digit code. The recipient opens it in any browser, no account.
- When the timer ends, the document is deleted from our storage and backups, and the link stops working.
Read-once, not keep-forever
View-only is the key for documents you do not want copied. The recipient reads the document inside a locked viewer. On Android, screenshots and recording are blocked while it is open. On iPhone, Apple does not let apps block screenshots, so the content blanks out in a capture and you get a real-time alert. It is honest protection, not a false promise.
And because the timer starts when they first open it, a document you send at night is still readable when they get to it in the morning, then it expires on schedule.
Good for
- Offer letters and contracts that only need to be reviewed.
- Bank statements or invoices shared with an accountant or office.
- ID and address proofs sent to a landlord, agent, or service desk.
Send one now
Start from fliko.in in your browser, or use the app for larger documents and longer windows. For why a leftover document copy is the real risk, read how document leaks really happen in India.
Share a file that deletes itself.
Free, no account needed to open a share.