DaVinci Resolve

Blackmagic Design's professional video editing, colour grading, VFX, and audio post-production suite — with a full-featured free version.

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In This Guide

  1. Who Is Resolve For?
  2. The Pages: Cut, Edit, Fusion, Color, Fairlight
  3. Color Grading: The Original Strength
  4. DaVinci Neural Engine & AI Tools
  5. Free vs Studio
  6. Pricing & System Requirements

Who Is Resolve For?

DaVinci Resolve is the professional video editing software that is also free. Blackmagic Design built Resolve as a full-stack post-production suite — editing, colour grading, visual effects, motion graphics, and audio post — and then made the core version free to use with no watermarks, time limits, or feature locks beyond a handful of advanced capabilities reserved for the paid Studio tier.

This pricing model is unusual in the creative software world and it has made Resolve the default editor for an enormous number of YouTubers, filmmakers, students, and independent creators. The free version is not a stripped-down demo. It's a professional editor that happens to cost nothing, and for most users it will do everything they need.

Resolve is particularly well suited for colourists and cinematographers — it started life as a colour grading system and remains the industry standard in that category. It's a strong fit for YouTubers and content creators who want more control than consumer editors offer without paying monthly subscriptions. It's also the natural choice for film students learning professional workflows, since Resolve's tools map to the same concepts used in Hollywood post-production.

Resolve is less of a fit for casual hobbyists who just want to trim holiday videos. The interface is more complex than iMovie or CapCut, the learning curve is steeper, and the system requirements are more demanding. For someone who just wants to drag a few clips together, a simpler tool is faster to learn.

The other consideration is that Resolve is genuinely resource-hungry. It runs well on modern hardware with a decent GPU, but on older machines it can struggle. Before committing to Resolve, check your computer meets the recommended specifications — this is not software that runs comfortably on a five-year-old laptop.

The Pages: Cut, Edit, Fusion, Color, Fairlight

Resolve is structured around pages — separate workspaces for different stages of post-production. Each page is specialised for its task and you move between them as your project progresses.

The advantage of the page structure is that each stage of post-production has a dedicated environment designed for that task. Colourists get tools designed for colour work, editors get tools designed for editing, audio mixers get tools designed for audio. The downside is that switching pages takes a moment to learn and can feel disjointed for users coming from single-window editors.

Color Grading: The Original Strength

DaVinci Resolve's colour grading capabilities remain its strongest differentiator. Resolve was a dedicated colour grading system for years before Blackmagic expanded it into a full NLE, and the colour tools still outclass what you get in Premiere Pro, Final Cut, or any consumer editor.

For anyone whose work lives or dies on colour accuracy and creative grading, Resolve is still the tool the industry is built around. Major feature films, Netflix dramas, commercials, and music videos are graded in Resolve. The fact that the same tool is available to a YouTuber for free is one of the most lopsided value propositions in creative software.

DaVinci Neural Engine & AI Tools

Resolve has integrated a growing library of AI-powered tools under the banner of the DaVinci Neural Engine. Many of these are in the free version; some are exclusive to Studio.

Resolve's AI tools are integrated into the workflow rather than bolted on as a separate chat. You don't talk to an AI assistant — you use tools that happen to use machine learning internally. For editors who want AI to save time without changing how they work, this is a more practical model than many alternatives.

Free vs Studio

The distinction between free Resolve and DaVinci Resolve Studio matters because it determines which features you get.

For the vast majority of users — YouTubers, students, indie filmmakers, hobbyists, and anyone working in 1080p or 4K — the free version is enough. Studio is aimed at professionals whose projects hit the specific feature limits, and at anyone who wants the best noise reduction tools built into the editor.

Pricing & System Requirements

EditionFreeStudio ($295 perpetual)
CostFree forever$295 one-time
Max resolutionUp to UHDUp to 32K
Max framerate (render)60fpsUnlimited
Noise reductionNoYes
Most Neural Engine AIMost includedAll (plus exclusives)
Multi-user collaborationNoYes
HDR gradingPartialFull
UpdatesFree foreverFree forever after purchase

The free version is genuinely free — there is no time limit, no watermark, no feature nag screen, and no account required beyond a one-time download from Blackmagic's site. You can use it indefinitely for commercial projects, personal work, or anything in between.

Studio at $295 one-time is a perpetual licence, not a subscription. You pay once and get lifetime updates. Compared to Premiere Pro at $22.99/month ($275/year), Studio pays for itself in roughly a year and keeps working indefinitely after that. For anyone who plans to keep editing video for more than a year, Studio is dramatically cheaper than subscription-based alternatives.

Studio is also bundled with Blackmagic camera purchases and many third-party hardware products. If you own recent Blackmagic gear, you may already have a Studio licence you didn't realise was included.

System requirements are where Resolve shows its professional heritage. Recommended specifications include a modern multi-core CPU, 16GB+ RAM (32GB+ for Studio), a dedicated GPU with at least 4GB VRAM (preferably 8GB+), and fast storage for media. 4K workflows benefit from NVMe SSDs for scratch and cache. On underpowered machines, playback stutters, renders are slow, and colour tools lag. Resolve is software that rewards capable hardware rather than running comfortably on anything.

The overall value proposition is hard to beat. Free professional video editing, with a paid upgrade path that costs less than one year of most competitors' subscriptions, and a perpetual licence model that keeps costs predictable. For anyone serious about video, Resolve deserves a place on the shortlist regardless of whether they eventually choose it.

DaVinci Resolve

Professional video editing, colour grading, VFX, and audio post-production — free for most users, $295 one-time for Studio.

Download DaVinci Resolve →