Drop media here or use the Media panel
Upload videos, images or audio to get started
Drop media here or use the Media panel
Upload videos, images or audio to get started
A full video editor in the browser — no installation, no subscription, no upload to a remote server. This editor lets you import multiple video and audio clips, arrange them on a timeline, cut and trim individual clips, add text overlays and transitions, adjust audio levels, and export the finished video — all running locally on your device using WebCodecs and the Web Audio API.
Multi-track timeline: Arrange video clips on separate video tracks and audio clips on audio tracks. Clips can be trimmed by dragging their edges, moved by dragging, and reordered by rearranging on the timeline.
Cuts and splits: Split any clip at the playhead position. Delete a section between two split points by cutting and removing that segment. This is how you remove the middle of a recording or cut out a mistake.
Text overlays: Add title cards, captions, or lower thirds as text layers that appear on screen for a specified duration. Control font, size, colour, and position.
Audio mixing: Adjust the volume of individual clips. Mute a video track's audio while keeping the video. Add a separate music or voiceover track on an independent audio track.
Transitions: Simple cut transitions between clips. Some editors include fades — check the available transitions in the toolbar.
Export: Render the completed edit to a video file that downloads directly to your device. Export quality settings control the output resolution and bitrate.
YouTube and social media content: Editing a talking-head video, combining multiple clips into a vlog, adding an intro and outro to a tutorial — the kinds of edits that make up the majority of social media video content. The browser editor handles these without needing Premiere Pro or Final Cut.
Corporate and professional videos: Editing recorded presentations, client testimonials, training materials, and team communication videos. Adding text overlays with names, titles, and key points. Creating a clean final video from multiple recorded segments.
Educational content: Teachers and educators creating explainer videos, screen recording plus voiceover combinations, and structured lesson videos. Trimming out mistakes and dead air makes recordings more polished and easier to watch.
Event highlights: Taking footage from a wedding, birthday, corporate event, or sports match and cutting it into a highlights reel. Arranging the best moments, trimming the gaps, and exporting a shareable video.
Content creation without expensive software: Many Indian creators starting out on YouTube, Instagram, and LinkedIn don't have access to or the budget for professional editing software. A capable browser editor lowers the barrier to producing polished video content significantly.
Space bar plays and pauses. Arrow keys step forward or backward by one frame. J/K/L for reverse, pause, and play at increasing speeds (standard video editor controls). Ctrl+Z to undo the last action, Ctrl+Shift+Z or Ctrl+Y to redo. Delete to remove the selected clip. These standard shortcuts make the editor faster to use once you're familiar with them.
Start by importing all your clips before making edits — having everything on the timeline gives you a full picture of the material to work with. Arrange the clips in rough order first, then go through and refine cuts.
Use the zoom control on the timeline to zoom in for precise frame-accurate cuts on sections that need precision, then zoom out to see the full edit structure. Most editors work best at a comfortable medium zoom for overall arrangement.
Save your project file regularly using the project save/export feature. The editor runs in memory — if your browser crashes, unsaved work is lost. Save after any major editing session.
Browser-based video editing is limited by your device's RAM and CPU. Complex projects with many high-resolution clips, long timelines, or many simultaneous tracks may be slow or unstable on lower-end devices. The editor works best for projects with a handful of clips at 1080p or lower resolution. For professional productions with 4K footage, multiple cameras, and complex effects, dedicated desktop software (DaVinci Resolve free version, Kdenlive, or Shotcut) is more appropriate.
Export times depend on the total video duration and your device's processing power. A 10-minute video export may take 15–30 minutes on a mid-range laptop. Keep the tab active during export — don't close the browser or switch to another heavy application.
This editor requires a modern browser with WebCodecs support — Chrome or Chromium-based browsers (Edge, Brave, Opera) work best. Firefox and Safari have partial support. If the editor loads but media doesn't process correctly, try switching to Chrome.