Skip to main content

The best video-editing software for 2021

If you’re working on a professional vlog, building a business brand online, or just trying to impress everyone with some great family video — you need a great video editor. Any of the following options in our list of the best video-editing software will help you manage the largest projects, find just the effects you want, or create professional-grade videos in minutes with the latest automated features.

Adobe Premiere

Image used with permission by copyright holder
  • Starting at $9.99 per month for the Premiere Rush version
  • Windows and Mac
  • No free version
  • Plenty of automation for video editing
  • Can create movies, slideshows and animated GIFs
  • Useful for casual to professional users

Adobe Premiere splits its time between Adobe Premiere Elements 2021 and Adobe Premiere Pro, with the latter being the more professional option, as well as the more expensive app. In either case, you get intelligent editing and flawless video creations that are relatively straightforward to set up while still offering a lot of power if you so wish.

With options for creating movies, slideshows, and animated GIFs, there’s plenty of automation, too, with auto-curation for all your past video files proving particularly useful for families and more casual users, or those in a rush. Adobe Premiere Pro builds upon that with far more professional features as well.

Vegas Edit

Image used with permission by copyright holder
  • From $249 for a one-off purchase for Vegas Edit; $13 per month for a subscription
  • Windows 10 only
  • Free trial available
  • Fast and efficient video editing workflow
  • Adaptable for casual to professional users
  • Unlimited royalty-free stock content with the subscription version

Vegas 19 promises to be great for everyone from content creators to professional videographers and editors thanks to an extensive set of video editing tools. It’s possible to create moods with powerful color grading, use artificial intelligence to tweak things, as well as adjust filters and effects to your heart’s content. An easy-to-understand workflow makes it all possible.

Options for Vegas 19 include paying for it as a one-off fee or opting to subscribe to Vegas Edit which is ideally suited for creating videos in an intuitive manner. With hundreds of effects available and plenty of colorization options, there’s a lot you can achieve with Vegas Edit for just $20 per month, right down to royalty-free stock content bundled in and a file backup service. For professionals, consider Vegas Pro to enjoy more extensive features such as motion tracking, color correction tools, and video repair tools, and an accurate text-to-speech translation feature, which is available from $20 per month for the former and $30 per month for the latter.

Apple Final Cut Pro

Apple Final Cut Pro
Image used with permission by copyright holder
  • Costs $300 as a one-off fee
  • Mac only
  • No free version
  • Professional video and audio editing capabilities
  • Extensive clip labeling and management tools
  • Plugins available to extend functionality

Working on a Mac? Apple’s Final Cut Pro is expensive but one of the best video editors available on Mac. Apple updated Final Cut Pro in 2017 with a new version of the software that transformed basically everything, offering a fluid interface that works like a dream — once you master all of the ins and outs.

It offers comprehensive video and audio editing designed for detailed work and longer productions, with some of the best clip labeling and management that we’ve seen. And while the primary software is a little lacking in digital effects (it focuses more on color adjustment and transitions), you can download FxPlug plugins to help round out the system.

Blackmagic DaVinci Resolve 17

Blackmagic DaVinci Resolve 15
Image used with permission by copyright holder
  • One off fee of $295
  • Available for Windows, Mac, and Linux
  • Free Version is available
  • Used in Hollywood for many video editing projects
  • Extensive training programs available
  • New and more powerful image processing than previous editions

Blackmagic’s professional DaVinci Resolve suite is perfect for editing teams, classes, and managing multiple large projects at the same time. Each tool in the suite, from user collaboration and chat functions to Fairlight Audio compatibility, is designed for pro editing.

Thanks to built-in Fusion FX, some of the most detailed color correction we’ve seen, and all the clip stitching tools you can imagine, there’s no video you can’t tackle with this software. It also pairs well with Blackmagic modular micro panels designed to work with the suite (particularly friendly for in-depth audio editing). Of course, an offering that includes nearly everything possible also has a pretty steep learning curve, so those not in the professional field might want something easier to learn.

Avid Media Composer

Image used with permission by copyright holder
  • From $23.99 per month
  • Available for both Windows and Mac
  • Limited free version option
  • Designed for professionals
  • Extensive workflow management tools
  • Plenty of motion effects available

Similar to DaVinci Resolve, Avid Media Composer is a business suite of tools designed for the pros, particularly larger studios with ambitious projects. It offers as much detailed control as possible over tracks, coloring, workflow management, resolution (up to 4K), VFX creation, motion effects — and well, pretty much everything is on the list here. That’s also why the software costs $20 per month to use, and requires a robust computer setup to master. Preferably with a very large screen, since Avid’s interface is particularly detailed and many tools are tiny.

Also, Avid offers Media Composer First, which is a free version that limits you to combining up to four video sources at only 1080p. That’s plenty for many projects, and all you need is an Avid Master Account, making this one of the most powerful free downloads available.

Vegas Pro Edit

Vegas Pro Edit
Image used with permission by copyright holder
  • $399 one-off fee
  • Windows and Mac versions available
  • No free version
  • Very customizable interface
  • Full 4K support
  • Number of OFX plugins available

A common pick for many hardworking vloggers, Vegas Pro Edit offers one of the best customizable interfaces in the business. It allows you to place the exact tools you need in the right spaces, so no part of the screen is wasted as you work.

The latest version offers full 4k support, instant free frame, event attribute management, a number of handy OFX plugins for pic-in-pic, lookup tables, and much more. If you already have plenty of experience editing videos but are still looking for software for your personal projects, take time to check out Vegas.

Corel VideoStudio Pro X10

Corel VideoStudio Pro X10
Image used with permission by copyright holder
  • Starting from $70 one-off fee
  • Windows and Mac versions available
  • Free trial available
  • Over 1,500 customizable effects and transitions
  • Possible to combine footage from up to four cameras
  • Supports 4K

If you are looking for a more affordable solution (keep in mind there are also plenty of free video editors available), Corel’s suite is only around $65 but still provides many valuable tools for syncing, editing, and converting footage. The downloaded includes more than 1,500 customizable effects, transitions, and other features you can add to your video.

You can also combine footage from up to four different cameras to examine a scene from different angles, as well as mapping clips for different time frames to slow down or speed up footage according to your requirements.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Tyler Lacoma
Former Digital Trends Contributor
If it can be streamed, voice-activated, made better with an app, or beaten by mashing buttons, Tyler's into it. When he's not…
Premiere Pro has a new breakthrough feature to speed up editing
Adobe Premiere Pro's automatic transcription lets you name speakers.

Adobe just announced a breakthrough in video editing with Premiere Pro that synchronizes changes from a transcript to the timeline, minimizing the time it takes to cut long interviews into targeted presentations.

In a press briefing before the announcement, Adobe shared an example of the new workflow, which looked almost effortless. The first step is to import video with auto-transcribe enabled. The transcription appears in a panel on the left.

Read more
You can now export videos 10x faster in Adobe Premiere Pro
Man using Adobe Premiere Pro on iMac

Adobe has just announced that Premiere Pro users will now be able to export videos up to 10 times faster than previously once they update to Premiere Pro 22.4.0. While the improvements won’t benefit all users, they offer significant improvements if you’re using a supported system.

In a blog post detailing the updates coming to Premiere Pro in May, Adobe explained that the changes affect Apple users whose Macs are powered by the M1 Pro, M1 Max, and M1 Ultra chips, as well as Windows PCs equipped with AMD graphics cards. The changes specifically impact 10-bit 4:2:0 HEVC footage.

Read more
Adobe brings real-time editing to Premiere Pro, After Effects
iMac Pro

Following its acquisition of Frame.io late last year, Adobe is finally making it easier for editors to collaborate on video projects by integrating tools from its newly acquired company into Adobe Premiere Pro.

As part of its announcement at the National Association of Broadcasters Show in Las Vegas, Adobe showed off a streamlined workflow that's designed to speed up the video-editing and approval processes thanks to Frame.io's integrated ability to quickly make edits to video -- even while the camera is still capturing footage -- quickly upload the edits for approval, and push the final product live to various video and social media platforms.

Read more