Ulož.to operates under Czech law (Act No. 121/2000 Coll., Copyright Act). English users attempting to file DMCA takedowns (a US mechanism) are redirected to a Czech-language notice-and-takedown form. While the platform responds to copyright claims, the process requires emailing abuse@uloz.to in English or Czech—responses are often bilingual but slow (5–14 days).
Mozilla Firefox does not have a native auto-translator. You will need the "To Google Translate" extension.
If you want to use Ulozto.net seriously, you will encounter the dreaded speed cap. Free users get "Pomalé stahování" – slow download speeds that can take 3 hours for a 1GB file.
Ulozto Disk is the premium tier. Here is what you get in English: ulozto.net english
Is it worth it for English speakers? Yes, if you frequently download large files (games/Blu-ray rips). However, note that Ulozto’s billing portal is in Czech. Use Google Translate on the payment page to avoid errors.
Short answer: Partially.
Ulož.to does not currently offer a 100% native English interface. However, you can get around 80% of the way there. Is it worth it for English speakers
Method 1: The URL trick
Try adding ?lang=en to the end of the URL. Example: https://ulozto.net/?lang=en
This sometimes forces a broken English overlay.
Method 2: Browser Auto-Translate (Best Option)
This instantly turns "Stáhnout" into "Download" and "Rychlost" into "Speed." date formats remain DD.MM.YYYY
English users frequently encounter “hybrid” strings: e.g., a button labeled “Stáhnout” (Czech for “Download”) next to an English “Cancel.” More critically, date formats remain DD.MM.YYYY, and file size units use decimal prefixes (1 GB = 1,000 MB, not 1,024 MiB), which can confuse non-European users.
Ulož.to supports a wide range of file types, including documents (PDF, DOCX), archives (ZIP, RAR), media (MP4, MP3), executables, and e-books. Free users are limited to individual file sizes up to 1 GB, while premium subscribers can upload files up to 20–50 GB depending on the current plan.