DaVinci Resolve - The Professional Option That Doesn't Cost Anything
I'll say it plainly: DaVinci Resolve is the most capable free video editor that exists. It's not "free with limitations" in any meaningful sense. The free version includes a full timeline editor, professional colour grading tools, Fusion for motion graphics, Fairlight for audio post-production, and collaboration features that most paid tools don't offer. Hollywood films get colour graded in DaVinci Resolve. The free version is the same software.
The paid version (DaVinci Resolve Studio, around $300 as a one-time purchase) adds some AI-powered features, noise reduction, stereoscopic 3D tools, and the ability to export certain formats at higher resolutions. If you're producing broadcast content or need GPU-accelerated noise reduction on a regular basis, Studio is worth it. For YouTube, Instagram, documentary editing, short films - the free version is complete.
The learning curve is real. Resolve is complex. The interface organises work into separate pages (Edit, Cut, Colour, Fairlight, Fusion, Deliver) and navigating between them takes time to learn. There are excellent free tutorials on YouTube, most notably from Casey Faris and Darren Mostyn, who've put together genuinely good beginner content. Budget a few hours to learn the basics before you need to edit something important.
System requirements are higher than most free tools. Resolve wants a dedicated GPU with at least 8GB VRAM for comfortable work, and 16GB of RAM minimum. On older computers it runs sluggishly. If your machine is several years old, test the free version first before committing to learning the interface.
CapCut - Free, Fast, and Better Than It Has Any Right to Be
CapCut surprised a lot of people when it started getting serious. It launched as a mobile app for TikTok-style content and then released a desktop version that genuinely competes with paid tools for the kinds of editing most creators actually need. Auto-captions that actually work. AI background removal. Motion tracking. Speed ramping. Templates that don't look terrible. All free.
The caveat everyone should know: CapCut is owned by ByteDance, the same company that owns TikTok. If you have concerns about where your footage goes when you use a cloud-based service from a Chinese-owned company, those concerns are legitimate. CapCut does cloud processing for many of its AI features. Whether that's a dealbreaker depends on what you're editing. For casual content, most people don't care. For anything sensitive - corporate footage, personal footage of children, anything with private information visible - I'd think twice.
For social media content production, CapCut is genuinely excellent. The mobile version is one of the best phone editors available. The desktop version handles multi-track editing well. The auto-caption accuracy is good for standard English. The text animation presets are polished in a way that takes hours to achieve manually in other tools.
Kdenlive - Open Source, Cross-Platform, Genuinely Capable
Kdenlive is the open source editor that doesn't get enough credit. It runs on Linux, macOS, and Windows, it's completely free, it produces no watermarks, and it handles most professional editing tasks competently. Multi-track timeline, colour correction, audio mixing, keyframe animation, proxy workflows for large files - all there.
It's not the prettiest software. The interface feels functional rather than polished. But functional is what you need when you're editing. I've used Kdenlive for documentary-style projects where the timeline complexity would have been expensive in paid software. It handled it fine. Export quality is solid, the codec support is broad, and the active development community means bugs get fixed and features get added regularly.
If you're on Linux and want a serious editor that isn't DaVinci Resolve, Kdenlive is the obvious choice. On Windows and macOS it's a strong option if you want something truly open source with no cloud dependency and no corporate ownership concerns.
iMovie - Free on Every Mac and iPhone, and Actually Fine
iMovie gets dismissed because it's basic and comes pre-installed, which makes people assume it can't be serious. But for a significant percentage of what people actually want to edit - family videos, short social content, simple cuts with music - iMovie does the job well and the interface is genuinely intuitive.
The limitation is real: no multi-track video editing beyond two tracks, limited colour grading, no advanced effects. When you outgrow iMovie you'll know, because you'll hit the wall clearly. But if you haven't outgrown it yet, using it is fine. Stop feeling like you need something more complicated just because more complicated tools exist.
The integration with iPhone and Mac is seamless in a way that genuinely saves time if you're in the Apple ecosystem. Start an edit on your phone on the bus, continue on your Mac at home. For that specific workflow, nothing matches it at any price.
Clipchamp - The One Already on Your Windows PC
Clipchamp is built into Windows 11 and most people walk past it without noticing. Microsoft acquired it a few years back and has been improving it steadily. It handles basic editing, has AI-powered tools for captions and background removal, and exports at decent quality without a watermark in the free tier.
It's not a replacement for Resolve or even Kdenlive for complex work. But for quick edits - trimming a clip, adding a title, putting music under footage - Clipchamp is faster than opening any other application because it's already there. The learning curve is minimal. If you need to edit something quickly and don't want to wait for a heavier application to load, Clipchamp is useful.
Which One Should You Actually Use?
Here's my honest take. If you're serious about learning video editing as a skill and you have a capable computer, start with DaVinci Resolve. It's the one that will grow with you indefinitely without hitting limitations. The learning investment pays off.
If you make social media content and want to produce it fast on any device, use CapCut. The privacy consideration is worth being aware of, but for most creators it's the most practical choice right now.
If you're on Linux or want a solid Windows/Mac editor with no corporate strings attached, use Kdenlive. If you're on a Mac doing simple stuff, iMovie is fine and you don't need to feel embarrassed about it. If you're on Windows and need something quick, try Clipchamp before downloading anything else.
The worst outcome is spending three hours reading comparison articles instead of actually editing something. All of these tools are free. Pick one, download it, and make something. You'll know within an hour whether it fits how you work.
For understanding what format and settings to export your finished video in for each platform, see our social media video settings guide. And if you downloaded footage from a platform to re-edit, the video formats guide explains what you're working with.