2D transition‐metal carbides and nitrides, known as MXenes, have displayed promising properties in numerous applications, such as energy storage, electromagnetic interference shielding, and catalysis. Titanium carbide MXene (Ti 3 C 2 T x ), in particular, has shown significant energy‐storage capability. However, previously, only micrometer‐thick, nontransparent films were studied. Here, highly transparent and conductive Ti 3 C 2 T x films and their application as transparent, solid‐state supercapacitors are reported. Transparent films are fabricated via spin‐casting of Ti 3 C 2 T x nanosheet colloidal solutions, followed by vacuum annealing at 200 °C. Films with transmittance of 93% (≈4 nm) and 29% (≈88 nm) demonstrate DC conductivity of ≈5736 and ≈9880 S cm −1 , respectively. Such highly transparent, conductive Ti 3 C 2 T x films display impressive volumetric capacitance (676 F cm −3 ) combined with fast response. Transparent solid‐state, asymmetric supercapacitors (72% transmittance) based on Ti 3 C 2 T x and single‐walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT) films are also fabricated. These electrodes exhibit high capacitance (1.6 mF cm −2 ) and energy density (0.05 µW h cm −2 ), and long lifetime (no capacitance decay over 20 000 cycles), exceeding that of graphene or SWCNT‐based transparent supercapacitor devices. Collectively, the Ti 3 C 2 T x films are among the state‐of‐the‐art for future transparent, conductive, capacitive electrodes, and translate into technologically viable devices for next‐generation wearable, portable electronics.