Media Finder

Search free, commercial-safe images, video, music, and sound effects across a dozen libraries from one page. Filter by license, preview before downloading, copy attribution.

What it does

Type one query and get results from Unsplash, Pexels, Pixabay, Wikimedia, NASA, Internet Archive, and more — all in a single grid. Filter by media type (image, video, music, sound effect) and license tier.

Hover any result for a quick preview. Click for a full-size view, attribution text you can copy, and the download link from the original source.

License-safe by default

The tool only shows results that are clearly safe for commercial use, or clearly attribution-required (and you'll see which). Anything ambiguous, non-commercial-only, or with a separate-license requirement is filtered out.

Even so — always double-check the provider's own license page before publishing. Free-to-use is rarely as simple as it sounds.

How to use it

  1. SearchType a query. Pick media type (image, video, music, SFX, or all).
  2. Browse and previewHover for a quick preview. Click for full size and attribution info.
  3. Download or favoriteHit the provider link to download from the source. Star results to save them in your browser for later.

When to use it

Hero images for blog posts

Quick keyword search across all the free image libraries. Skip the per-site signup forms.

Background music for videos

Browse free music and SFX libraries side by side without juggling tabs.

Educational content

Wikimedia, NASA, and Internet Archive have huge collections of public-domain visuals — easy to find here, hard to find elsewhere.

FAQ

Are the downloads stored on your servers?
No. Search metadata flows through us, but actual downloads go straight from the original provider to your device.
Are all results truly free for commercial use?
We filter to commercial-safe and attribution-required licenses only. But license terms can change — always check the provider's own page before publishing.
Why don't I see results from provider X?
We only include providers with public APIs and clear licensing. Some big names (Shutterstock, Getty) are paid-only and excluded.