About 1Scrape
1Scrape is a small software company. We turn public data from TikTok, Instagram, and Google Maps into clean spreadsheets, priced by the result instead of by the month.
Why we built it
We come out of tech, and like most people building something, we spent the early days doing our own outreach. That work runs on information: who is posting about the problem you solve, which businesses in a city still have no website, which creators in a niche actually have an audience and a way to reach them. None of that is hidden — it is sitting in public, spread across thousands of pages, and gathering it by hand is the least valuable way a person can spend an afternoon.
The tools that existed all asked for something we did not want to give. Write and maintain a scraper, learn an API, or sign a monthly contract for a platform we would use in bursts. What we wanted was narrower: describe the data, get the file, pay for what came back. That is the whole product.
What we actually do
You pick a source and describe what you want — a hashtag, a profile, a search, a place. We collect the public posts or listings that match, flatten them into one row each, and hand back a CSV that opens in Excel, Google Sheets, or Numbers. There is nothing to install and no API to wire up. A typical run finishes in about thirty seconds.
Billing is metered against results, not seats or months. Runs cost $8 per 1,000 results, every account starts with $5.00 in free credits, and you are charged for what was actually scraped rather than the cap you set. If a run fails, it is refunded in full.
What we won't do
We collect data that is already public — the posts, captions, counts, and the contact details people choose to put in a public bio or a business listing. We do not touch private accounts, and we do not try to reach anything behind a login. If a creator has kept something private, it stays private.
We are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by TikTok, Instagram, Meta, or Google. What you do with the data is on you: platform terms still apply, privacy laws like GDPR and CCPA still govern how personal data can be used, and none of this is legal advice. Scrape public data, respect the people in it, and don't spam.