A free video editor that runs in your browser. No install, no watermark.
vidr is a free video editor you run straight in your browser, with no download to install and no watermark on what you export. Drop in a clip, cut and trim it on a multitrack timeline, grade the color, add text or captions, and export a clean mp4. Everything runs on your device through ffmpeg.wasm, so there is no upload step and no account to create. It is a lightweight tool, not a full Premiere clone, but it handles the common cut, grade, and export jobs fast and for free.
Who it's for
This is for anyone who needs to cut a video quickly without paying for Premiere or signing up for an online editor that stamps a watermark on the result. It fits creators trimming clips for social, people captioning a talking-head video, and anyone who wants a quick trim, speed change, or color tweak without installing software. If you need deep features like full audio mixing or advanced compositing, a desktop editor will serve you better. For the everyday cut-grade-caption-export loop, vidr covers it free.
How it works
- Open vidr in your browser and drop in your video, image, or audio files. Nothing uploads. Your media stays on your device.
- Arrange clips on the multitrack timeline, then trim, split, and blade to cut what you need. Adjust speed or reverse as needed.
- Add the finishing touches: color grade with curves, HSL, and LUTs, drop in text or import SRT captions, and apply fades or transitions.
- Export to mp4 directly in the browser. No watermark, no sign-up, the file saves straight to your device.
FAQ
Is vidr really free?
Yes. vidr is free to use with no account required and no watermark on exports. Because the editing and mp4 export run client-side in your browser, there is no server cost to pass on, so the editor stays free.
Do my videos get uploaded anywhere?
No. vidr processes everything in your browser using ffmpeg.wasm. Your media never leaves your device, there is no upload step, and nothing is stored on a server. When you close the tab, the files are gone from the app.
What can I actually do in vidr, and what are its limits?
You get a multitrack timeline with trim, split, and blade, speed and reverse, keyframes for opacity, fades, pan/zoom, and color, color grading with curves, HSL, and LUTs, Gaussian blur, dip-to-black and cross-dissolve transitions, text plus SRT caption import/export, and mp4 export. It is lightweight by design, so it does not aim to match every feature of a full desktop editor like Premiere. It covers the common cut, grade, caption, and export jobs quickly. There is also a secondary AI-storyboard workspace for planning AI-generated footage with a prompt grid and frame extractor.