Descript vs Audacity
Side-by-side comparison of Descript and Audacity.
Edit video and audio by editing text
Free, open-source audio editor for serious creators
What they are
Descript
Descript treats audio and video like a word processor: it transcribes your recording, then lets you cut, rearrange, or delete media by editing the transcript. Podcasters, video creators, and course makers use it to remove filler words, generate AI voice clones, and publish without a separate editing app. The text-based workflow is genuinely faster for dialogue-heavy content, though complex multi-track productions still hit its limits.
Audacity
Audacity is a free, open-source desktop application for recording, editing, and processing audio on Windows, Mac, and Linux. Podcasters, musicians, and voice-over artists use it to cut recordings, apply effects, and export to common formats. It covers the fundamentals well, though its interface feels dated compared to modern DAWs and it lacks native multi-track timeline editing for complex productions.
if you need video editing and transcription. It has a usable free tier to start with.
- +Text-based editing makes cutting spoken content much faster than traditional timeline editing
- +Automatic filler-word removal saves significant post-production time
- +AI voice cloning (Overdub) fixes small spoken mistakes without re-recording
if you need video editing. It has a usable free tier to start with.
- +Completely free with no feature paywalls
- +Cross-platform support on Windows, Mac, and Linux
- +Large library of built-in effects and filters including noise reduction
Which to choose
Descript and Audacity both cover video editing, so this is a real either-or for some teams. The right pick depends on which one's wider feature set and pricing fit how you work.
Read the full reviews for Descript and Audacity.
Pricing checked 3 Jun 2026.