Online Fast Video Trimmer

Trim and cut videos quickly directly in your browser - fast, private, and easy to use.

Fast Video Trimmer

Trim and cut videos quickly without installing desktop software or sending files to a remote server.

How It Works

1

Upload your video

2

Set trim points

3

Preview the result

4

Download the result

Key Features

Browser-Based Processing

Trim and cut videos quickly locally in your browser, so your source files stay on your device.

Multi-Segment Trimming

Cut several moments from one video and prepare them in a single browser workflow.

No Quality Loss

Use trimming settings designed to avoid unnecessary re-encoding where the browser pipeline supports it.

Wide Format Support

Start with common video formats including MP4, MOV, MKV, WEBM, AVI, FLV.

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.

Supported Formats

Works with common browser-friendly formats:

MP4MOVMKVWEBMAVIFLV

Best for

Use the trimmer to remove dead air, cut a highlight from a longer recording, or split a clip into a few useful segments before posting. It is built for quick edits where you already know the approximate start and end points.

Practical notes

For cleaner exports, place cuts near natural pauses, scene changes, or moments with steady audio. Very large files can take longer because processing depends on your device and browser.

FAQ

Is Fast Video Trimmer free?

Yes. Fast Video Trimmer 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.