Online Video Merger
Merge multiple videos into one file directly in your browser - fast, private, and easy to use.
Merge multiple videos into one file without installing desktop software or sending files to a remote server.
How It Works
Add more videos
Merge videos
Download the result
Key Features
Browser-Based Processing
Merge multiple videos into one file locally in your browser, so your source files stay on your device.
Multi-Format Support
Use common formats such as MP4, MOV, MKV, WEBM, AVI, FLV. Browser codec support can vary by device.
High-Quality Output
Create a clean output while preserving as much original quality as the browser workflow allows.
Privacy First
Your media is processed locally. It is not uploaded to DojoClip for this tool.
Easy to Use
A focused interface keeps the workflow simple: choose files, set the option that matters, and download.
Fast Processing
Complete quick edits in minutes or seconds depending on file size and your device.
Supported Formats
Works with common browser-friendly formats:
Best for
Use the video merger when you have a few clips that already belong together, such as phone recordings from the same event, sequential product shots, or short social edits. Put the files in order before merging so the final video follows the intended timeline.
Practical notes
Browser merging works best when source clips use similar dimensions and codecs. If one clip has a very different frame size or orientation, preview the output before sharing it so transitions and framing look intentional.
FAQ
Is Video Merger free?
Yes. Video Merger is available as a free browser tool for quick media work.
Are my files uploaded?
No. This workflow is designed to run locally in your browser, so your source file stays on your device.
Which formats are supported?
The page is built for common formats including MP4, MOV, MKV, WEBM, AVI, FLV. MP4, MOV, WebM, MP3, WAV, PNG, and JPG are usually the safest browser inputs when they apply.
When should I use a browser tool instead of desktop software?
Use it for focused edits when speed and privacy matter. A full editor is still better for complex timelines, color work, or large batch production.