Video editing software covers everything from one-tap mobile clip stitching (CapCut, InShot) to full post-production suites used on theatrical features (Avid Media Composer, DaVinci Resolve, Final Cut Pro, Premiere Pro). The category exploded with creator economy growth: in 2026, professional-grade editing capability is available across price points from free (DaVinci Resolve Studio's free tier, CapCut) to thousands of dollars per seat per year.
The category split mirrors how video gets made. Creators producing short-form content (TikTok, Reels, Shorts) work in CapCut, Descript, and increasingly Adobe Express. Long-form YouTubers and creator-led businesses run Premiere Pro or DaVinci Resolve. Independent filmmakers and small production companies live in DaVinci Resolve or Premiere. Major studio post-production still runs Avid Media Composer for editorial and Resolve for color, with Premiere as a mid-tier alternative.
Picking the right tool depends mostly on what you produce and who you collaborate with. A solo creator's needs (speed, AI captions, social aspect ratios, mobile-ready exports) look nothing like a documentary team's needs (long-form timeline, complex audio, multi-camera, color grading). Most teams underestimate how much their tool choice shapes how they edit.