The idea behind lorito.me fits in one sentence: paste a detail, pick a channel, and jump straight into the conversation — without saving anyone's number. Behind that simplicity is a public page that does the boring work for you. Let's walk through what happens, step by step.
What the public page is
When you share a lorito.me link — in a message, in your bio, or printed on a poster — whoever opens it doesn't land on an app to install or a sign-up form. They reach a light public page: the destination name or number, the available channels, and a single button to continue. Nothing else. That restraint is deliberate: the less there is between your visitor and the chat, the better.
The three steps, under the hood
For the visitor it's three gestures; for lorito, three very concrete decisions.
Read the detail
lorito interprets what you shared: a phone number in international format, a Telegram username (@user), or a Messenger page name. It detects the format to know which links make sense.
Build the official link
Based on the channel your visitor picks, lorito assembles that app's official link — wa.me, t.me, m.me, or the phone's sms scheme — with the destination already embedded.
Redirect and step aside
On tap, the visitor jumps to the right app with the conversation ready to start. lorito doesn't send messages or save the contact: it just opens the door.
Why we use official links
Each messaging app publishes its own link format built precisely for this: opening a chat without friction. Using the official one — instead of a homemade shortcut — means the conversation opens in the visitor's native app, respects their privacy settings, and keeps working even if the platform's internals change. More reliable today, more stable tomorrow.
lorito is a bridge, not a middleman: it prepares the right link and gets out of the way.
What happens with privacy
The short answer: we don't store numbers or build an address book from your contacts. The personal redirect needs no account or sign-in, and the detail you paste isn't kept after the link is generated.
The public page exists so a one-off conversation is instant for whoever opens it and clean for whoever shares it. No apps, no accounts, no saved contacts.
And for businesses?
The same mechanics scale to lorito.me/business: each location gets its own page with all channels, a memorable short link, and a printable QR. When someone scans it, the chat opens instantly and the action adds to your scan analytics — so you know which branch gets the most conversations, and when.
Try your first link now.
No account, nothing to install.