The fastest, highest-quality way to get your Android photos onto your Mac — no USB cable, no Android File Transfer, no Google Photos. Works with every photo format at full resolution.
Download Seyfr from Google Play — it's free. Works on Samsung, Pixel, OnePlus, Xiaomi, and every other Android brand running Android 8.0 or later.
Open the Seyfr app. A QR code appears on your phone screen immediately. No login, no setup, no pairing process.
Open Camera app on your Mac, or open Safari, Chrome, or Firefox and scan the QR code. A photo transfer interface opens in your browser instantly.
In Seyfr on your Android, tap your photo gallery, select photos or entire albums, and they download directly to your Mac's Downloads folder at full resolution.
Seyfr transfers every photo format natively, exactly as stored on your Android phone:
| Format | Description | Seyfr Support |
|---|---|---|
| JPEG / JPG | Standard photos from all cameras | Full resolution |
| RAW (DNG) | Unprocessed sensor data — Google Pixel, etc. | Exact copy, no processing |
| RAW (ARW, NEF) | Sony, Samsung, Nikon RAW | Exact copy |
| HEIC / HEIF | High Efficiency format — newer Android phones | Mac opens natively |
| 50MP / 108MP photos | Samsung Galaxy, Xiaomi flagship cameras | Full resolution, no downsizing |
| PNG, WEBP, GIF | Screenshots, web images | Full resolution |
Android File Transfer (AFT) by Google uses the MTP protocol over USB. This approach has had growing compatibility problems since Mac (Ventura and Sonoma), and broke further when Android 14 changed MTP implementation. Google last updated AFT in 2021.
Common failure symptoms:
Seyfr bypasses all of this by using Wi-Fi instead of USB. It has no MTP driver dependency, requires no Mac app installation, and works identically on every Mac version from Big Sur to Sequoia.
Transfer speed depends on your Wi-Fi network. Seyfr transfers at full network speed:
| Wi-Fi Speed | 100 photos (~200MB) | 1,000 photos (~2GB) | Full 10GB camera roll |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100 Mbps | ~16 seconds | ~2.7 min | ~14 min |
| 300 Mbps | ~5 seconds | ~55 sec | ~5 min |
| 600 Mbps (Wi-Fi 6) | ~3 seconds | ~30 sec | ~2.5 min |
| Method | USB Required | Works on Ventura/Sonoma | Full Quality | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seyfr (wireless) | No | Always | Zero compression | Free |
| Android File Transfer | Yes | Often fails | Free (but often broken) | |
| Google Photos | No | Storage limits | Free (15GB) then paid | |
| MacDroid | Yes | $19.99/yr | ||
| WhatsApp/Telegram | No | Heavily compressed | Free (but degrades photos) |
Free. No USB. No account. Full quality. Works on all Macs and all Android phones.
Install Seyfr on your Android phone (free, Google Play). Open it — a QR code appears. On your Mac, open any browser and scan the QR code. Select your photos in the Seyfr interface and they download to your Mac at full resolution. No USB, no Android File Transfer, no Google Photos needed.
Use Seyfr — it's completely wireless. Open the Seyfr app on your Android, scan the QR code on your Mac in any browser, and select your photos. They transfer over Wi-Fi at full quality. No USB cable, no Android File Transfer app, no drivers required.
Android File Transfer by Google has had widespread issues since Mac (Ventura and Sonoma), especially on M1/M2/M3 Macs and Android 14+ phones. Seyfr is the wireless alternative that works reliably on all versions.
Yes. Seyfr transfers all file types including RAW (DNG, ARW, NEF), JPEG, HEIC, and any other format. Files arrive on your Mac exactly as stored on your phone — not re-encoded or compressed.
Yes. Select your entire DCIM/Camera folder and transfer everything in one operation. On a 300Mbps Wi-Fi network, 10GB of photos transfers in about 5-7 minutes.
No. Seyfr sends files bit-for-bit identical to the original. Your 50MP photos stay 50MP. Your 108MP Samsung photos stay 108MP. Nothing is compressed, re-encoded, or resized.
Seyfr transfers directly from your Android phone to your Mac over Wi-Fi — Google Photos is never involved. Photos go from your Android's storage directly into your Mac's Downloads folder. Your Google Photos quota is untouched.