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WeVideo review: pricing, features, and honest assessment (2026)

Flat monthly fee pricing · Cloud · Web · Free trial available

WeVideo lets you edit video from any browser, any device -- including Chromebooks that can't run traditional editing software. This review covers actual pricing ($4.99-$36.99/mo), what each plan really includes, the stock library and green screen features, and where Descript, VEED, or Kapwing might be a stronger pick for your workflow.

Written by RajatFact-checked by Chandrasmita

Editorial policy: How we review software · How rankings work · Sponsored disclosure

Pricing

Flat monthly fee · Free plan available (5 min/month, 480p, watermarked)

Deployment

Cloud

Supported OS

Web

What is WeVideo?

WeVideo is a cloud-based video editor that runs entirely in your browser -- no downloads, no powerful hardware required. It offers a multi-track timeline, green screen, screen recording, a stock library of 1M+ assets, and Chromebook-native editing. Plans start at $4.99/month (annual) with a limited free tier.

WeVideo pricing breakdown -- what each plan actually includes

WeVideo has five tiers: Free, Power, Unlimited, Professional, and Business. The free plan gives you 5 minutes of publish time per month at 480p resolution with a WeVideo watermark and 1 GB of cloud storage. It's enough to test the editor, but not enough to produce anything you'd actually share. Power at $4.99/month (annual) bumps you to 720p, 30 minutes of publish time, and 20 GB of storage -- still no stock library access.

The real starting point for most creators is the Unlimited plan at $7.99/month (annual). It unlocks unlimited publish time, unlimited cloud storage, and 4K Ultra HD export. But here's the catch: you still don't get unlimited access to the stock media library, premium motion titles, or brand management tools. Those require the Professional plan at $19.99/month (annual). The Business plan at $36.99/month adds collaboration tools, multiple seats, and user management.

The hidden gotcha is how aggressively features are gated by tier. Green screen is available starting at Power, but the full stock library -- the thing WeVideo heavily advertises -- requires Professional. Screen recording is available on all paid plans, but simultaneous screen-and-webcam recording works best with the Chrome extension. And if you're paying monthly instead of annually, prices roughly double: Power jumps to $9.99, Unlimited to $15.99, Professional to $39.99, and Business to $73.99.

Compared to competitors: Descript's Hobbyist plan at $24/month gives you text-based editing, AI transcription, and 4K export. VEED Lite at $12/month includes 1080p exports, stock access, and AI subtitles. Kapwing Pro at $16/month (annual) offers unlimited projects and storage. CapCut is free for most features with a $7.99-$19.99/month Pro tier. WeVideo's Unlimited plan is cheap on paper, but you often end up needing Professional to access the features you actually want -- and at $19.99/month, the value gap narrows fast.

View WeVideo pricing

Free: $0/mo (5 min/month, 480p, watermarked, 1 GB storage)
Power: $9.99/mo ($4.99/mo billed annually)
Unlimited: $15.99/mo ($7.99/mo billed annually)
Professional: $39.99/mo ($19.99/mo billed annually)
Business: $73.99/mo ($36.99/mo billed annually)

Verified from the official pricing page on March 24, 2026. View source

What WeVideo actually does (and what it doesn't)

WeVideo hits a sweet spot for educators, students, and casual creators who need a browser-based editor that works on any device -- especially Chromebooks. The multi-track timeline is more capable than most browser editors, the 1M+ stock library saves time, and screen-plus-webcam recording is genuinely useful for tutorials. But it shows its age compared to AI-powered competitors like Descript and VEED, the free plan is painfully limited, and the pricing tiers lock key features (like 4K export and unlimited stock) behind higher plans. If you're making content for social media or need AI transcription and smart editing, newer tools have passed WeVideo by. If you're a teacher building video projects on Chromebooks, it's still the best option in the category.

Quick verdict

Best when: You're a teacher running video projects on Chromebooks, a student who needs a browser-based editor that doesn't require...

Worth it if: Power ($4

Think twice if: Five minutes of publish time at 480p with a watermark barely lets you test the interface, let alone...

WeVideo is best for

You're a teacher running video projects on Chromebooks, a student who needs a browser-based editor that doesn't require installation, or a casual creator who wants a straightforward timeline editor without the learning curve of desktop software. Skip it if you need AI-powered editing, fast social media workflows, or professional-grade output. The sweet spot is education environments and light video work where browser access and simplicity matter more than cutting-edge features.

Why WeVideo stands out

Browser-native editing on any device (including Chromebooks), built-in screen-and-webcam recording, and a genuine multi-track timeline. Most browser-based editors offer a simplified single-track experience -- WeVideo gives you layered tracks for video, audio, text, and overlays, which is closer to what you'd get in iMovie or Filmora. The 1M+ stock library is large enough that you rarely need to source assets elsewhere. vs. Descript: WeVideo is a traditional timeline editor, not a text-based one -- better if you think visually. vs. CapCut: WeVideo works on Chromebooks where CapCut's desktop app can't run.

Is WeVideo worth the price?

Power ($4.99/mo annual) works if you just need basic editing at 720p with limited publish time. Unlimited ($7.99/mo) is the minimum for serious use -- 4K and unlimited publishing. But if you want the stock library and premium templates, you'll need Professional ($19.99/mo). Test the free plan first to see if the interface clicks for you. Don't go annual until you've confirmed the feature tier you actually need -- upgrading mid-cycle doesn't always prorate cleanly.

WeVideo features

Multi-Track Timeline Editor

WeVideo's timeline editor supports multiple video, audio, and text tracks with drag-and-drop arrangement. You can layer clips, adjust timing with frame-level precision, add transitions between segments, and control audio levels per track. It's closer to a desktop NLE (non-linear editor) experience than most browser-based tools offer. The Storyboard mode provides a simpler alternative for beginners, but Timeline mode is where the real editing happens. The limitation is that the timeline doesn't support advanced features like keyframe animation, speed ramping, or complex motion graphics. If you need those, you're looking at desktop software or a more advanced tool. The timeline also performs best with shorter projects -- editing a 30-minute video with multiple tracks can feel sluggish in the browser, especially on lower-powered devices.

Screen and Webcam Recording

WeVideo includes built-in screen recording, webcam recording, and a combined mode that captures both simultaneously as a picture-in-picture layout. Recordings drop directly into your project timeline for immediate editing. The Chrome extension adds an additional capture option that some users find more reliable for longer recordings. This is especially valuable for educators recording lessons, tutorials, or software walkthroughs. Quality depends on your internet connection since recordings are processed in the cloud. If your connection drops mid-recording, you may lose footage. The picture-in-picture layout is automatic -- you can resize and reposition the webcam overlay in the timeline, but you don't get the same level of control as dedicated screen recording tools like Loom or OBS. For quick captures it's excellent; for polished screencasts, you may want a dedicated tool.

Green Screen (Chroma Key)

WeVideo offers chroma key compositing starting at the Power plan, letting you remove green (or blue) backgrounds and replace them with any image, video, or stock footage. The setup is simple: apply the green screen effect to your clip, adjust the sensitivity slider, and the background is replaced. For student projects, educational presentations, and creative content, this adds significant production value without extra software. The chroma key works best with well-lit, solid-color backgrounds. Uneven lighting, wrinkled backdrops, or shadows will leave artifacts. The edge detection isn't as refined as what you'd get in DaVinci Resolve or After Effects, so fine details like hair can look rough. For classroom projects and social content, the quality is more than acceptable. For professional broadcast or client work, you'll want a more powerful keying tool.

Education and Classroom Integration

WeVideo's education offering includes Google Classroom integration, teacher assignment workflows, student account management, and content moderation tools. Teachers can create video project templates, assign them to students, set deadlines, and review submissions -- all within the platform. Education plans start at $89/year for a single teacher and $299/year for a classroom, which includes student seats. The integration works well for schools already in the Google ecosystem. Students log in with their school Google accounts, access assignments, and submit completed videos without leaving the WeVideo-Classroom workflow. The limitation is that education plans may cap export resolution (some at 720p depending on the license tier), and students on classroom plans don't get the same feature set as individual Professional users. If you need 4K export for student film projects, verify the resolution cap on your specific education license.

Pros and cons

Separate what looks good in the demo from what actually matters after a month of daily use.

Strengths

The strengths that matter most once you start using WeVideo daily.

Runs on any device with a browser -- including Chromebooks

WeVideo is one of the few capable video editors that works natively on Chromebooks and low-powered devices. There's nothing to install -- you open a browser tab and start editing. For schools running 1:1 Chromebook programs, this is a genuine differentiator. No other editor in this price range offers a real multi-track timeline on Chrome OS without workarounds.

Multi-track timeline that feels like real editing software

Unlike simplified browser editors that give you a single video track with basic trimming, WeVideo offers a proper multi-track timeline with drag-and-drop layers for video, audio, text overlays, and effects. You can stack clips, adjust layer ordering, and control timing across tracks. It's not Final Cut, but it's significantly more capable than Kapwing or Canva's video editor for anything beyond simple cuts.

Built-in screen and webcam recording with picture-in-picture

WeVideo includes screen recording, webcam recording, and simultaneous screen-plus-webcam capture that automatically creates a picture-in-picture layout. This is built directly into the editor -- no separate app or Chrome extension needed (though an extension is also available). For educators making tutorials, trainers recording walkthroughs, or YouTubers doing reaction-style content, this saves a step that other editors require a separate tool for.

1M+ stock media library built into the editor

The stock library includes over a million royalty-free videos, images, and music tracks accessible directly from the editing timeline. You don't need to leave WeVideo or manage separate stock subscriptions. The library is searchable by keyword and genre, and clips drop directly onto your timeline. The catch: full access requires the Professional plan or higher.

Green screen support without extra software

WeVideo includes chroma key (green screen) capability starting at the Power plan. For educators and student creators who want to place themselves in different backgrounds -- virtual field trips, science demonstrations, historical reenactments -- this is a standout feature. Most competing browser editors either don't offer green screen or charge more for it. Setup is straightforward: record against a green background and WeVideo handles the key.

Limitations

Check these before subscribing — these are the limitations most likely to affect your experience.

Free plan is too limited to evaluate the product properly

Five minutes of publish time at 480p with a watermark barely lets you test the interface, let alone produce a real video. You can't access the stock library on the free plan, and 1 GB of cloud storage fills up fast. Compared to CapCut (free with most features) or Descript (free with 1 hour of transcription), WeVideo's free tier feels like a teaser, not a trial.

Key features are locked behind higher-priced plans

WeVideo's marketing highlights the stock library, premium templates, and brand tools -- but these require the Professional plan at $19.99/month. The Unlimited plan at $7.99/month sounds great until you realize it doesn't include unlimited stock access, which is confusing given the name. This tier-gating means the advertised experience costs 2-4x what the entry price suggests.

No AI editing features in a market that's moved on

Descript offers text-based video editing and AI transcription. VEED has AI subtitles, background removal, and eye contact correction. Kapwing has AI-powered resizing and smart cut. CapCut includes AI clipper, auto-captions, and generative fill. WeVideo has none of these. If you're making content for YouTube or social media in 2026, the lack of AI tools means more manual work for tasks competitors automate.

Internet dependency with no offline editing option

Because WeVideo runs entirely in the browser, you need a stable internet connection for everything -- uploading footage, editing, and exporting. There's no offline mode. If your connection drops mid-edit, you risk losing progress. For educators in schools with spotty Wi-Fi or creators who travel, this is a real limitation. Desktop tools like CapCut or Descript don't have this problem.

Export and rendering can be slow, especially on free and lower plans

Cloud-based rendering means export times depend on server load, not your device's processing power. Lower-tier plans don't get rendering priority, so exports can take 10-20 minutes for a 5-minute video during busy periods. Higher-resolution exports (4K) take even longer. If you're used to quick turnarounds from desktop editors, this waiting adds up.

See PricingWeighed the pros and cons? Try it free.

Setup, integrations, and compatibility

Getting started with WeVideo takes about 5 minutes: create an account, and you're in the editor. No software to download, no system requirements to check beyond having a modern browser. The interface defaults to a 'Storyboard' mode for beginners and a 'Timeline' mode for more experienced editors. Most creators will want Timeline mode immediately -- Storyboard mode is useful for young students but too limited for real editing.

The learning curve is gentle if you've used any timeline-based editor before. Dragging clips onto tracks, trimming, splitting, and adding transitions all work as expected. Green screen setup takes a few tries to dial in the chroma key sensitivity. Screen recording is straightforward -- click record, choose screen or webcam or both, and the clip lands directly in your project. The stock library search is decent but not as well-curated as VEED's or Descript's.

For classroom use, WeVideo shines with its assignment and collaboration features. Teachers can create templates, assign projects to students, and review submissions -- all within the platform. The education plans ($89/year for a single teacher, $299/year for a classroom) integrate with Google Classroom and include student accounts. This is the use case where WeVideo has the clearest advantage over competitors.

Practical tip: if you're on the Unlimited plan and want stock media without upgrading to Professional, you can use free stock sites like Pexels or Pixabay and import the clips. It adds a step, but saves $12/month. Also, use the Chrome extension for screen recording if the built-in recorder gives you quality issues -- the extension captures at higher fidelity on some systems.

Before you subscribe

Free plan and getting started with WeVideo

Before you subscribe to WeVideo, work through these questions. The pricing looks simple -- the feature gating is where it gets tricky.

1

Start with the free plan and build a real project -- not a test clip. Edit actual footage, try the timeline, attempt an export. The 5-minute limit is tight, but it's enough to feel whether the interface works for you.

2

Figure out which plan you actually need BEFORE going annual. The Unlimited plan sounds like enough, but if you need stock media or brand tools, you're looking at Professional. The difference between $7.99/month and $19.99/month is significant over a year.

3

If you're choosing WeVideo for education, test the Google Classroom integration and assignment workflow with a small group first. The education pricing is fair, but the collaboration features work differently than the individual plans -- make sure they match your teaching style.

4

Check whether your must-have features exist. If you need AI captions, auto-transcription, or AI-assisted editing, WeVideo doesn't offer them. If you need those features, look at Descript, VEED, or CapCut before committing here.

5

Compare directly against Descript, Kapwing, and CapCut. Edit the same 3-minute video in each tool. WeVideo's strength is the traditional timeline -- but if you find yourself wishing for smarter automation, a different tool will save you hours over time.

Ready to keep comparing WeVideo?

See Pricing

Use pricing, tradeoffs, and alternatives before you make the final click.

Frequently asked questions about WeVideo

How much does WeVideo cost per month?

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WeVideo offers a free plan plus four paid tiers. With annual billing: Power is $4.99/month, Unlimited is $7.99/month, Professional is $19.99/month, and Business is $36.99/month. Monthly billing roughly doubles those prices. Education plans start at $89/year for a single teacher. The Unlimited plan at $7.99/month is the minimum for 4K export and unlimited publish time.

Does WeVideo have a free plan?

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Yes, but it's very limited. The free plan gives you 5 minutes of publish time per month, 480p resolution, a WeVideo watermark on all exports, and 1 GB of cloud storage. You can't access the stock media library. It's enough to test the editor interface but not enough for regular content production. CapCut and Descript both offer more generous free tiers.

Who is WeVideo best for?

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WeVideo is strongest for educators running video projects on Chromebooks, students who need a browser-based editor, and casual creators who want a traditional timeline without installing software. It's a weaker fit for social media creators, YouTubers who need AI tools, or anyone who needs advanced effects. The education integration with Google Classroom is genuinely best-in-class.

WeVideo vs Descript -- which is better?

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They solve different problems. WeVideo is a traditional timeline editor that runs in a browser -- you drag clips, trim, and layer tracks. Descript lets you edit video by editing text, with AI transcription, filler word removal, and smart editing tools. Descript is better for podcast editors, talking-head creators, and anyone who wants AI to speed up editing. WeVideo is better for visual editors who think in timelines and need Chromebook support.

Does WeVideo work on Chromebooks?

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Yes -- this is one of WeVideo's biggest strengths. It runs entirely in the browser with no installation required, making it one of the few real video editors that works natively on Chromebooks. The multi-track timeline, green screen, screen recording, and stock library all work on Chrome OS. This is why WeVideo is so popular in schools where Chromebook deployments are standard.

Can I use WeVideo for YouTube content?

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You can, but it's not the strongest option for serious YouTube creators. WeVideo supports 4K export (Unlimited plan and above) and direct publishing to YouTube. But it lacks AI-powered features like auto-captions, smart cuts, and thumbnail generation that tools like Descript, VEED, and CapCut offer. For simple videos and educational YouTube channels, it works. For content that competes on production quality, you'll likely outgrow it.

What does WeVideo's stock library include?

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WeVideo's stock library contains over 1 million royalty-free video clips, images, and music tracks. It's searchable by keyword and clips drop directly onto your timeline. However, full stock library access requires the Professional plan ($19.99/month annual) or higher. Lower plans get limited or no stock access, which is one of the most common surprises for new users.

Can teams collaborate in WeVideo?

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Yes. The Business plan ($36.99/month annual) includes multi-seat access, user management, and collaboration tools. Education plans also support classroom collaboration with teacher-student workflows and Google Classroom integration. For small teams, the Professional plan lets you share projects, but real multi-user management requires Business. Kapwing and Descript both offer stronger real-time collaboration features.

Is WeVideo worth the money in 2026?

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It depends on your use case. For educators on Chromebooks, WeVideo is still the best option and the education pricing is reasonable. For individual creators, the value is harder to justify. The Unlimited plan at $7.99/month is cheap, but once you add the features you actually need (stock library, brand tools), you're at $19.99/month -- and at that price, Descript and VEED offer more modern feature sets. WeVideo's value proposition has narrowed as competitors have added AI tools.

Can I cancel WeVideo anytime?

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Yes, you can cancel your WeVideo subscription at any time. If you're on a monthly plan, your access continues until the end of the current billing cycle. If you're on an annual plan, you've already paid for the full year -- cancellation stops auto-renewal but doesn't refund the remaining months. Your projects and media stay accessible until the plan expires, then revert to free plan limitations.

WeVideo alternatives worth comparing

If WeVideo isn't the right fit, these video editing tools take different approaches -- from AI-powered text-based editing to mobile-first workflows. The best choice depends on whether you need browser access, AI features, or just the cheapest capable editor.

ToolBest whenMain tradeoffPricingFree trial
WeVideo(this tool)You're a teacher running video projects on Chromebooks, a student who needs a browser-based...Five minutes of publish time at 480p with a watermark barely lets you test...Flat monthly feeYes
DescriptYou create podcast episodes, interview videos, talking-head YouTube content, or course material where most...Descript is built around spoken-word contentPer-seatYes
VEEDYou make short-form social videos, marketing clips, or subtitled content on a regular schedule...VEED is a browser tool, and it hits the browser's limits when you push...Per-editorYes
KapwingYou produce social media videos, YouTube Shorts, Reels, or TikToks on a regular schedule...This is Kapwing's most consistent complaint across reviewsPer-workspaceYes
InVideoYou produce marketing videos, social media ads, or product promos on a regular schedule...Every AI prompt attempt consumes generation minutes — including the ones that produce results...Flat-rate tieredYes

Descript

Descript flips the editing model: instead of dragging clips on a timeline, you edit video by editing a text transcript. AI transcription, filler word removal, AI voice cloning, and text-based cuts make it the fastest option for talking-head and podcast content. Hobbyist plan starts at $24/month with 4K export. Choose Descript over WeVideo if you edit interview, podcast, or dialogue-heavy video and want AI to handle the tedious parts.

VEED

VEED is a browser-based editor like WeVideo, but built around AI tools: auto-subtitles, background removal, eye contact correction, AI avatars, and one-click social formatting. Lite starts at $12/month with 1080p export and stock access included. Choose VEED over WeVideo if you're making social media content and want AI to speed up repetitive tasks like captioning and resizing.

Kapwing

Kapwing is a browser-based collaborative editor focused on speed and social content. It offers AI-powered smart cut, auto-resize for different platforms, real-time team collaboration, and a clean interface that's faster to learn than WeVideo's timeline. Pro starts at $16/month (annual). Choose Kapwing over WeVideo if you work in a team, produce social-first content, and value real-time collaboration.

InVideo

InVideo AI generates complete videos from text prompts, combining stock footage, AI narration, and automatic editing. The free plan allows 10 AI-generated videos per month. Plus starts at $25/month. Choose InVideo over WeVideo if you want to skip the editing process entirely and generate videos from scripts or blog posts -- especially for marketing and social content at volume.

FlexClip

FlexClip gives creators a way to evaluate video editing software fit, workflow tradeoffs, and day-to-day creative usability.

Sources

Pricing and product details referenced on this page were verified from public sources. Confirm final details directly with the vendor before purchasing.

Related pages

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WeVideo pricing

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WeVideo alternatives

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