VEED Interactive Demo

VEED is a browser-based video editor with AI tools for auto-captions, translation, noise removal, filler word removal, and eye contact correction, letting creators edit and publish video directly from a web browser without installing software.

What is VEED?

VEED is a browser-based video editing platform founded in 2018. It started as a simple tool for adding subtitles to video without downloading software, and over time expanded into a full-featured editor with AI-powered tools for transcription, translation, and production cleanup. The browser-based approach means there is no software to install or update: you upload a video, edit in the browser, and download or publish the result.

The editing suite covers the tasks that take the most time in post-production. Auto-captions generate from the audio track in seconds, and the caption editor lets you fix errors and restyle the text. The filler word removal tool identifies and strips 'um,' 'uh,' and other vocal fillers from the transcript, shortening the edit without manual review. Background noise cleanup runs in one click and handles common recording environments like home offices and outdoor locations. Eye contact correction adjusts the speaker's gaze to look directly at the camera even when they were reading from a teleprompter or looking at a second monitor.

VEED also includes a screen recorder with face cam overlay, direct publishing to YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram, and a translation feature that covers over 100 languages. The free plan adds a VEED watermark to exports. The Basic plan starts at $18 per month and the Pro plan at $30 per month, each removing the watermark and increasing storage and export limits.

How to get started with VEED

  1. 1

    Upload your video or start a recording

    Go to veed.io and either upload a video file or start a new recording using the screen recorder with optional face cam overlay. Uploads support most common video formats. Larger files take a few minutes to process before the editing tools become active. The screen recorder is accessible directly from the browser, so there is no separate app to install.

  2. 2

    Run the AI cleanup tools

    With your video loaded, run the tools that handle the time-consuming cleanup work. Click Clean Audio to remove background noise. Open the transcript editor and use Remove Filler Words to strip vocal fillers from the recording. If the speaker was looking off-camera while reading notes or a teleprompter, run Eye Contact Correction to adjust their gaze. These three steps alone can cut post-production time significantly for talking-head content.

  3. 3

    Generate and edit captions

    Click Auto Subtitle to generate a caption track from the audio. VEED transcribes the speech and places captions on the video timeline. Review each caption block in the editor for accuracy, fixing any transcription errors. Adjust the caption style, font size, and position to match your brand or platform. If you are publishing to multiple languages, run the translation tool on the finished caption track before exporting.

  4. 4

    Trim, reformat, and add elements

    Use the timeline editor to trim the beginning and end of the video or cut specific sections. Add text overlays, logos, or lower thirds using the elements panel. If you are reformatting for a different aspect ratio, such as converting a 16:9 recording into a 9:16 short, adjust the canvas size and reframe the video within the new crop. Preview the full video at full quality before finalizing.

  5. 5

    Export or publish directly

    Download the finished video as an MP4 or publish directly to YouTube, TikTok, or Instagram using the connected account settings. Choose your export resolution and quality settings before downloading. If you are on the free plan, the exported file will have a VEED watermark, so confirm you are on a paid plan before publishing anything externally. For teams embedding video alongside interactive product demos, exporting and hosting separately gives more control over the viewing context.

Who is VEED most useful for?

VEED is most useful for content creators, marketers, and educators who need to produce polished video regularly but do not want to invest in desktop editing software or develop advanced editing skills. The AI cleanup tools, specifically noise removal, filler word removal, and auto-captions, handle the parts of post-production that are time-consuming but not creative. A talking-head video recorded in a home office can go from raw footage to a clean, captioned export in minutes.

Marketing and social media teams at companies use VEED to add captions and reformat content for different platforms, and the translation feature makes it practical to produce localized video for multiple markets from a single recording. For teams that use Supademo to build interactive product demos, VEED handles the video layer of their content mix: short explainers, product update announcements, and tutorial videos that accompany the interactive demo links in email and social campaigns.

Freelancers and agency teams appreciate the collaboration features on paid plans, where multiple team members can access the same project and editors can hand off files without sending large video files back and forth. The browser-based format also eliminates the hardware bottleneck: VEED handles rendering on its servers, so a laptop that struggles with 4K video locally can still edit and export high-resolution files through the browser.

Alternatives to VEED

VEED competes with browser-based editors, AI-powered production tools, and async video platforms depending on which part of the workflow matters most.

Loom

Loom is built around recording and sharing short videos with teammates or customers, with a viewer interface that supports reactions, comments, and timestamps. It is less of an editing tool and more of an async communication platform. The recording experience is fast, the sharing links work without the viewer needing an account, and the viewer analytics tell you who watched and for how long. Teams that want quick async updates lean on Loom; teams that want polished output for external audiences use VEED.

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Canva

Canva's video editor lives inside a broader design platform, making it natural for teams that are already using Canva for social graphics, presentations, and documents. The video editing capabilities are less deep than VEED's, particularly for AI audio and transcription tools, but the integration with Canva's template and asset library is convenient for teams that want consistent visual branding across video and static content in one tool.

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Descript

Descript's core differentiator is its text-based editing model: the transcript is the edit timeline, so deleting a sentence from the transcript removes it from the video. This makes restructuring spoken content faster than working in a traditional timeline. Descript also supports voice cloning for fixing recorded lines and has strong screen recording tools. It skews toward podcasters and video editors comfortable with a script-centric workflow, and it tends to cost more than VEED at comparable usage levels.

CapCut

CapCut is ByteDance's video editing tool, and its feature set reflects its origin: it is tuned for short-form content with trending templates, sound sync, and effects that match the aesthetic of high-performing TikTok and Reels content. The free tier is more generous than VEED's, with no watermark on exported videos. Creators focused specifically on short-form social content often find CapCut's templates and effects library more relevant than VEED's broader editing feature set.

FAQs on VEED

Commonly asked questions about VEED. Have more? Reach out and our team will be happy to help.

Does VEED work entirely in the browser?

VEED runs entirely in the browser with no software installation required. You upload your video, edit using the web interface, and download or publish the finished file. Rendering happens on VEED's servers, which means your local machine's processing power does not limit what you can edit or export. The browser-based format works on Mac, Windows, and Linux as long as you have a current browser and a stable internet connection.

How accurate are VEED's auto-captions?

VEED's auto-captions are accurate for clear speech in supported languages, typically reaching accuracy comparable to other cloud transcription services. The caption editor makes corrections straightforward: each word is clickable and editable directly in the timeline. Accuracy drops for heavy accents, technical terminology, proper nouns, and recordings with significant background noise. Running the noise cleanup before generating captions improves results for problematic recordings.

What languages does VEED support for translation?

VEED's translation feature supports over 100 languages. You can translate the caption track and export the video with translated subtitles or use the translated text to create a separate language version. For teams producing content for international audiences, this makes it practical to localize a single recording into multiple language versions without hiring translators for every video. Translation quality follows the same patterns as machine translation generally: strong for widely spoken languages, less reliable for low-resource ones.

What is VEED's free plan and when should I upgrade?

VEED's free plan includes access to the full editor and most AI tools but adds a VEED watermark to every exported video. For any professional or public-facing use, the watermark makes the free plan impractical. The Basic plan at $18 per month removes the watermark, increases export quality limits, and adds more storage. The Pro plan at $30 per month adds advanced AI features and higher usage limits. If you are evaluating VEED for a team workflow, the free plan is sufficient to test the editing experience but commit to a paid plan before publishing anything externally.

How does VEED compare to Loom for recording and sharing video?

VEED and Loom both include screen recorders, but they serve different workflows. Loom is optimized for quick async communication: you record, share a link, and the viewer watches in a Loom player with reaction and comment features built in. VEED is an editing tool that happens to include a recorder. If the goal is async team communication with minimal friction, Loom is faster. If the goal is producing a polished, edited video for an external audience, VEED is better suited.

Can VEED publish directly to social platforms?

VEED supports direct publishing to YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram from within the editor. You connect the relevant accounts in your VEED settings, and the publish interface lets you add a title, description, and scheduled time before posting. This covers the basic distribution workflow without switching to a separate scheduler. For more complex multi-platform scheduling with analytics, a dedicated social media management tool handles more edge cases, but VEED's native publishing is sufficient for most individual creator workflows.

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