MyHeritage lets you export any tree you manage as a standard .ged file, on every plan including free accounts. The export lives under tree management on the website — here's the route.
Sign in at myheritage.com in a browser, hover over the Family tree tab in the top navigation, and choose Manage trees. (Like most exports, this is a website feature rather than an app feature.)
Each tree on the list has its own row of actions. Click Export to GEDCOM for the tree you want — if you don't see it directly, it's tucked into the row's ⋯ / actions menu.
MyHeritage prepares the file and either downloads it directly or emails you a download link when it's ready — large trees take a little while. The link leads to a .ged (sometimes zipped) file.
Download it to your computer. If it arrived zipped, unzip it first — the file you want ends in .ged.
Drop it into the free viewer to explore every person, chart, and place — or convert it straight to PDF, Excel, or a shareable web page. Everything runs in your browser; nothing is uploaded.
Open the viewerBrowse the toolsThe .ged file imports directly into Ancestry, FamilySearch-compatible desktop programs, Gramps, and every other genealogy tool. Before you import it anywhere, it's worth opening it in the free viewer to confirm everything came through, or checking it with the validator — MyHeritage trees that grew through Smart Matches sometimes carry duplicate people, which the validator flags.