Comparison

Descript vs EditBuddy

Both use AI to speed up video editing. Descript replaces your editor. EditBuddy lives inside Adobe Premiere Pro. Here's how to choose.

The short answer: If your final cut already happens in Premiere Pro, EditBuddy keeps you there. If you're cutting podcasts in a text editor and never opening a timeline, Descript is the better fit. They solve different halves of the same problem.

Side-by-side

 EditBuddyDescript
Where it runsInside Premiere Pro (CEP panel)Standalone app (Mac / Windows / web)
Editing modelCuts your existing Premiere timelineText-based editing, separate project
Silence removalYes — frame-accurate, multi-clipYes
Filler word removalYes — hybrid AI + rulesYes
Retake / take-group detectionYes — multi-signal scoringLimited
Auto captions on timelineYes — MOGRT templates on V4Inside Descript only; SRT export to Premiere
Auto B-rollYes — metaphor-first AI promptsStock library search, manual placement
Multi-cam podcast switchingYes — up to 8 speakers, sync from timelineYes — 2 cameras max in most plans
Long-form to shortsYes — hook-scored, 9:16 reframeYes
Round-trip to PremiereNo round-trip — already in PremiereLossy XML export, breaks effects
Free tierOne Auto Edit free, no card1 hour transcription / month
Pro tier starts atSee pricing$15 / mo (Hobbyist)

When Descript wins

You're a podcaster who never opens a timeline. You want to delete words from your video by deleting them from a text transcript. You're a solo creator who doesn't own a copy of Premiere.

When EditBuddy wins

You already pay for Adobe Creative Cloud. Your final color, sound design, and motion graphics happen in Premiere. You don't want to maintain two parallel projects or fight with XML round-trips. You want AI to do the boring 80% — silence, retakes, captions, B-roll — without ripping you out of the editor you already know.

The round-trip problem

If you edit in Descript and finish in Premiere, you export an XML and re-link the media. The handoff is fragile: track effects, transitions, color grading, and motion graphics often don't survive. Every time you re-edit in Descript, you re-export, re-link, re-fix. EditBuddy avoids this entirely because it cuts your Premiere sequence directly — no second project, no XML.

Try EditBuddy inside the editor you already use

Free — one Auto Edit on a 3-min clip. No card. Installs as a Premiere Pro panel in under a minute. No second app, no second subscription.

Install Free

Frequently asked questions

Is EditBuddy a Descript alternative?

For the AI-editing parts of Descript — silence, fillers, captions, multi-cam podcast switching — yes. EditBuddy is not a text-based editor. It works inside Premiere Pro instead of replacing it.

Can I use Descript and Premiere Pro together?

Yes — Descript exports to Premiere via XML. The round-trip is lossy and breaks effects. EditBuddy avoids the round-trip by editing your Premiere timeline directly.

Which is cheaper?

EditBuddy starts free (One Auto Edit free). Descript's free plan caps transcription minutes hard. For a Premiere user, EditBuddy adds capability without a second subscription on top of Adobe.

Does EditBuddy do text-based editing?

Not in the Descript sense. EditBuddy uses your transcript to drive cuts (silence, retakes, fillers) but the editing UI is the Premiere timeline.

Can I keep my Premiere effects when I use EditBuddy?

Yes. Cuts happen on your existing sequence; effects, color, transitions, motion graphics — everything stays in place.

See the features