Under 150 ms
Direct peer-to-peer over your WiFi. Fast enough to demo, game, or teach without the lag that kills every other mirroring tool.
Mirror your iPhone to any nearby iPad over WiFi. Low latency. No cables. No AirPlay dance. And your screen never leaves your local network.
Direct peer-to-peer over your WiFi. Fast enough to demo, game, or teach without the lag that kills every other mirroring tool.
Your screen is encrypted end-to-end and flows straight between the two devices. PairCast's servers never see a single frame — they couldn't decrypt it if they wanted to.
Scan a QR code. Tap Broadcast. Done. No Apple ID pairing, no cables, no settings to fight. The iPhone and iPad don't even need to be signed into the same account.
Tap Receive. The iPad shows a QR code and a 6-character backup code.
Open PairCast on your iPhone, tap Send, scan the QR. If the camera can't see it, type the 6 characters instead.
iOS shows its broadcast sheet. Pick PairCast Mirror. Your iPhone screen fills the iPad within a couple of seconds.
Most mirroring tools either route your video through a cloud server, or they demand an Apple ID handshake and work only between devices on the same account. PairCast does neither.
We use WebRTC: a standards-based, end-to-end encrypted, peer-to-peer video protocol that browsers use for video calls. Our signaling server's only job is to help the two devices find each other on your WiFi — once the handshake completes, every frame goes straight from iPhone to iPad over your local network.
We can't see your screen. We don't log your screen. We don't cache, store, analyze, or train models on your screen. The encryption keys are negotiated on your devices; we never hold them. When the session ends, there is nothing to delete because there was never anything to keep.
Any iPhone and iPad running iOS 15 or later. Both devices need to be on the same WiFi network.
Not yet. PairCast is designed for the same-network case: you and your iPad in the same room, on the same WiFi. A cross-network mode is on the roadmap but isn't the priority.
Not in the first release. Audio mirroring is planned for the next update.
You can use QuickTime for iPhone-to-Mac with a cable, or AirPlay for iPhone-to-Mac on the same network. PairCast focuses on the gap they don't fill: iPhone to iPad, wirelessly, with low enough latency to actually feel live.
Not in v1. Most demos go iPhone → bigger screen. We'll consider the reverse once the core is solid.
Free during beta. Pricing is TBD.
iOS only for now.
Parts of it will be. The signaling server and the shared WebRTC glue are good candidates; the broadcast extension and UI will stay closed for now.
We're onboarding TestFlight users in batches. Tell us you want in — we'll send the invite the next time a slot opens.
Request an inviteOne email, no spam, unsubscribe by replying "stop".