Riverside vs Rev
Side-by-side comparison of Riverside and Rev.
Studio-quality remote recording for serious podcasters
Human and AI transcription for video creators
What they are
Riverside
Riverside records audio and video locally on each participant's device, then uploads lossless files to the cloud, so a shaky internet connection never ruins a take. It's used by podcasters, journalists, and video creators who need broadcast-quality recordings from remote guests. The built-in AI tools handle transcription, clip creation, and basic editing. One honest note: the interface has a learning curve for guests who aren't tech-savvy.
Rev
Rev transcribes audio and video files using either automated AI or human transcriptionists, returning time-stamped text files, captions, and subtitles. It serves podcasters, journalists, video producers, and educators who need accurate transcripts quickly. Human transcription is notably more accurate than AI for complex audio, but costs more per minute. A free trial lets you test the AI tier before committing.
if you need video editing and hosting. It has a usable free tier to start with.
- +Local recording preserves audio and video quality regardless of guest internet speed
- +Up to 4K video recording per participant track
- +Automatic transcription with decent accuracy on clean audio
if you need video editing and transcription. It has a usable free tier to start with.
- +Human transcription accuracy is among the highest available, often 99%+
- +Supports both captions (SRT, VTT) and full transcripts in one workflow
- +Turnaround for human transcription is typically a few hours for short files
Which to choose
Riverside and Rev 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 Riverside and Rev.
Pricing checked 3 Jun 2026.