Havanese Info
Get a free API key + new tools as they ship
100 calls/day, no card, no spam. Built by one person, in public.
About Havanese
Working with this task no longer requires installing heavy desktop software — Havanese runs entirely in your browser, instantly. The goal was to keep the path from "open the page" to "get the result" as short as possible. No mandatory account, no cookie wall, no upsell at every step. If you find yourself doing this regularly, the rest of the utility suite covers most adjacent tasks with the same approach.
When you'd reach for Havanese
You're cleaning up a folder of files that accumulated over a project and need to standardize them.
Designers, writers, and developers wrapping up deliverables.
Drop each file in, copy the output, move on.
You're hitting the daily limit of a paid SaaS and need a backup option for a single quick job.
Marketers and ops people whose primary tool is metered.
Stay productive without burning credits.
You're on a public or shared machine and don't want to leave traces of what you're working on.
Travelers, contractors, anyone working from a friend's computer.
Nothing is uploaded, nothing persists if you're not signed in.
You need to handle a one-off task right before a meeting and don't have time to install anything.
Anyone working remotely on a borrowed or restricted machine.
Open the page, get the result, paste it into your doc — under a minute.
Frequently asked about Havanese
- Is Havanese really free?
- Yes — Havanese is free for unlimited personal use, with no account required and no watermark on the output.
- Does Havanese work on mobile?
- Yes, Havanese is fully responsive and tested on iOS Safari and Android Chrome.
- Are my files uploaded to a server when I use Havanese?
- Havanese processes everything in your browser using local APIs. Your files never leave your device.
- Can I use Havanese commercially?
- Yes. The output of Havanese belongs entirely to you, with no licensing restrictions.
- Will Havanese change my original file?
- Never. Havanese only reads your input file and produces a new output file.
