Auto-cut into 30 / 60 / 90-second parts · 9:16 · ZIP export — Free, No Upload
One long recording can become a whole week of short-form posts. This page shows how to slice a long video — a podcast, a livestream replay, a tutorial or a vlog — into evenly timed clips that are already reframed for TikTok, and how to get every piece back in a single ZIP file without uploading anything.
Cut a long video into clips of any length and download them all at once — in your browser, no server, no watermark.
Open the TikTok Video Converter →Short-form feeds reward volume and consistency. A single 30-minute interview is hard to publish on TikTok, but the same interview cut into thirty one-minute moments gives you thirty native posts, each able to find its own audience. Repurposing long content this way — sometimes called content slicing or clip farming — is the fastest way to feed a posting schedule without filming anything new.
The two hard parts are usually the cutting and the reframing. Doing it in a desktop editor means dragging the playhead, setting in and out points dozens of times, exporting each clip, and then resizing each one to vertical. This tool collapses all of that into a single pass: set the clip length once, and every segment comes out cut and reframed.
Split by duration. You enter the seconds per clip — 60, for example — and the tool walks through the whole video creating back-to-back clips of that length. A 12-minute source becomes twelve 60-second clips automatically. This is the right choice when you simply want uniform, feed-ready pieces.
Split into N equal parts. You enter how many clips you want, and the tool divides the total runtime evenly. Pick this when you have a fixed number of posts in mind — say, exactly five parts of a story — and you want them all the same length whatever the source duration is.
When you split by a fixed number of seconds, the last piece is rarely a whole clip. A 5:40 video cut into 60-second clips leaves a 40-second remainder. You decide what happens to it: keep it as a short final clip, merge it into the previous clip so the last one runs a bit long, or discard it entirely. That single setting stops you from publishing an accidental three-second fragment.
Each clip is reframed to your chosen aspect ratio (9:16 by default), encoded, and added to a ZIP archive named with a numbered prefix — tiktok-clip-01, tiktok-clip-02, and so on — so the order matches the timeline. When processing finishes the ZIP downloads automatically. Because everything happens locally, your footage is never uploaded, and you can trim an intro or outro first with the start and end trim fields.
Load the video, choose Split by duration and enter 60 seconds. The tool cuts the hour into sixty clips, reframes each to 9:16, and packages them in a single ZIP. Disable audio and use 2× speed if you want the export to finish faster.
30, 60 and 90 seconds are the common lengths. 60 seconds works everywhere. There is no enforced limit, so you can set any value that suits your content.
Yes. Set Trim start to the number of seconds to skip and Trim end to where the useful content stops. Splitting then applies only to the trimmed range.
No. The video is loaded once into your browser and every clip is produced locally. Nothing is sent to a server at any point.