Sharing Envato Elements: What’s Allowed and How to Do It Legally
Can you share Envato Elements resources with other people? Here’s what the license says, how to do it the right way, and what mistakes to avoid.

Discover how to share Envato Elements with your team or clients without violating the license. We explain what is allowed, what to avoid, and how to work safely.
Can Envato Elements be shared?
Yes, but with clear limitations:
- You can use resources in client projects
- You can work as a team with the Teams plan
- You cannot share original downloaded files
- You cannot share your account or credentials
The correct way to share depends on whether you work alone, in a team, or with clients.
Many creative professionals ask the same question when they start collaborating with others: can I share Envato Elements resources with my team or clients without getting into trouble?
The short answer is yes, but not in any way.
Envato Elements provides access to a huge library of creative resources with unlimited downloads: templates, videos, music, photos, fonts, graphics, and much more. But being able to download a lot does not mean you can redistribute it freely. The key is to understand how the license works and to differentiate between sharing a subscription, sharing access, and sharing a final worked resource.
And here it is important to make a distinction. There are platforms like Sharingful on the internet that allow sharing the cost of certain digital subscriptions in an organized, safe, and simple way. This model works very well for services designed for multiple profiles or members, as is the case with many streaming platforms or some family plans. But in professional tools like Envato Elements, it is not enough to "share the cost": you must respect a license linked to specific users and projects.
Therefore, if you want to do it right, you need to know exactly what is allowed and what is not.
How the Envato Elements license works
Before sharing anything, you need to understand how the license works. It is not an open or free license: it is linked to your active subscription and each project in which you use a resource.
Project-based license
Every time you download a resource, you must associate it with a specific project.
If you use the same resource in multiple projects:
- you need to register a download for each one
This means you cannot freely reuse resources without control.
Additionally, the license is non-exclusive, which means that:
- other users can use the same resource
- you cannot trademark a design based on those elements
This point is especially important if you work in branding, visual identity, or design for clients who expect exclusivity.
What you cannot do with Envato Elements
This is where most mistakes are made.
You cannot share original files
You cannot:
- send an unmodified PSD
- share an editable template
- pass downloaded files to someone without a subscription
That is considered redistribution and conflicts with the license.
You cannot share your account
Sharing username and password:
- is prohibited
- can lead to your account being closed
But there is also an important practical problem: you could lose the license history, which affects the traceability of your projects.
This can complicate:
- internal audits
- legal reviews by clients
- proof of legitimate use in already delivered works
How to share Envato Elements in a team correctly
If you work with more people, the correct way to do it is through the Teams plan.
How the Teams plan works
- Each member has their own account
- Each user downloads resources with their own license
- Credentials are not shared
The administrator can:
- invite users by email
- control access
- manage team additions and removals
This allows each use to be correctly linked to a person and a project.
How to work with clients without violating the license
The key rule is simple: you can share the final result, not the downloaded resource as such.
What you can do
- Deliver a final video
- Export designs in PNG, JPG, or PDF
- Deliver a finished piece for client use
What you should not do
- Send editable files with original resources inside
- Share downloaded templates
- Give the client access to the source files as they came from Envato
Practical example
A designer creates a corporate video using music and templates from Envato Elements.
They can deliver the final rendered video to the client without issue. What they should not do is send the editable project with the original templates for the client to reuse or modify freely on their own.
Useful alternative: collections for clients
Envato allows creating shared collections for review.
This is useful for:
- showing options to a client
- validating styles before downloading
- speeding up the selection phase
This way, the client can review proposals without you having to redistribute protected files.
Most common mistakes when sharing Envato Elements
These are some of the most common errors:
- Sharing credentials among multiple people
- Sending original downloaded files
- Reusing resources in different projects without registering them
- Not keeping the download and license history
- Confusing "teamwork" with "free access to the account"
Avoiding these mistakes is key to working with peace of mind and maintaining a professional operation.
Best practices for agencies and teams
When multiple people participate in creative projects, more than common sense is needed: a system is needed.
Organization by projects
It is advisable to work with a clear structure:
- folder by client
- subfolder by project
- resources organized according to their use and license
Access control
It is also recommended to:
- periodically review who is still on the team
- remove unnecessary access
- prevent former collaborators from retaining permissions
Download registration
Each resource should be easily associated with:
- a project
- a date
- a responsible person
This not only improves order. It also protects you.
Sharing Envato Elements correctly (quick summary)
It works if:
- You use the Teams plan
- Each user has their own account
- You deliver final products to clients
- You maintain control of licenses
It does not work if:
- You share username and password
- You redistribute original files
- You reuse resources without registering them
- You deliver editable templates downloaded from the platform
How Sharingful works and why a distinction is needed here
Sharingful is a platform that allows sharing the cost of digital subscriptions in an organized way. Instead of relying on informal agreements between friends, family, or colleagues, the platform facilitates group coordination, manages payments, and helps maintain stability in services that are indeed designed to be used by multiple members or profiles.
This model is especially useful in subscriptions where:
- the service itself allows multiple users
- there are family or group plans
- each member can use their own profile or access
In those cases, Sharingful simplifies the process and avoids many of the common problems of informal sharing, such as non-payments, lack of coordination, or loss of spots.
However, with Envato Elements, an important distinction must be made. Here it is not enough to share the cost among several people. The license is linked to the user who downloads the resource and the project in which it is used. Therefore, although Sharingful very well represents how the shared subscription model works in general, in the specific case of Envato, the correct option for working with multiple people is to use the official Teams plan.
In other words: Sharingful fits very well in services where sharing is part of the design of use; in creative tools with strict professional licenses, the important thing is to rely on the official structure offered by the platform.
Conclusion
Sharing Envato Elements correctly is not complicated, but it does require a good understanding of the rules.
The main idea is this:
- if you work in a team, use the Teams plan
- do not share original files
- always deliver final products
- maintain control over licenses and access
At the same time, it is worth remembering that not all digital subscriptions work the same. In services that do allow flexible and organized sharing, platforms like Sharingful can be a practical way to save and better manage access among multiple people. In tools like Envato Elements, however, the priority is not just to share the cost, but to correctly respect the professional use license.
Understanding this difference helps you save when necessary, but also work safely when it matters most.
