Comparison

captionrich vs Veed

Both edit video in the browser. One counts videos; the other meters your minutes.

Veed is a broad AI video platform — subtitles, dubbing, avatars, even text-to-video — with uploads rendered on its servers and usage metered in transcription minutes and AI credits. captionrich is narrower on purpose: talking videos, animated captions, and text-based cutting, with flat pricing and rendering in your browser.

captionrich vs Veed at a glance

Veed details verified from public pricing and feature pages, July 2026. Their plans can change — always confirm on their site.

 captionrichVeed
Starting paid price$7/mo (Pro) or $72/yr — same price for everyoneA/B-tested by cohort; Veed's own pages cite a Creator plan from $20/mo, third-party guides report ~$9–19/mo entry pricing
Free plan3 videos/mo, up to 1 minute, no watermarkWatermarked exports, 720p, 10-minute export cap, limited auto-subtitle minutes per month
Subtitle meteringCaptions on every video in your quota — no per-minute meterMetered transcription minutes, shared with translation: each translated language consumes the video's minutes again
Subtitle languages50+ (up to 99% accuracy on clean audio)125+ (up to 99.9% accuracy, per Veed)
Text-based editingYes — the core of the productYes — Edit by Script, on all plans (space-separated languages only)
AI cleanupRemove Silences, Filler Words, Bad Takes, Smart Jump Cuts, Auto B-roll, Auto EmojiMagic Cut removes silences, fillers, and repeated takes — English only
How editing runsLive in your browser — no server render queue; projects sync to the cloud for cross-device resumeUploaded to and rendered on Veed's servers
Max video length7 minutes per video (Max Pro)10 minutes free; longer exports on paid plans
Subtitle filesCaptions are burned into the videoSRT/VTT/TXT download on paid plans

Why short-form creators pick captionrich

  • Flat, public pricing: $7/mo Pro for everyone. Veed A/B-tests plan names and prices by cohort, so what you pay depends on which variant you land in.
  • No subtitle metering: every video in your quota gets captioned, and translating doesn't drain a shared minutes pool per language.
  • The free plan exports without a watermark; Veed's free exports are watermarked at 720p.
  • Export renders in your browser — no waiting on a server render queue.
  • AI cleanup isn't English-only: Veed's Magic Cut currently supports only English.
  • 40+ animated word-level caption styles built specifically for TikTok, Reels, and Shorts.

When Veed is the better pick

  • Language breadth: 125+ subtitle languages and AI dubbing in 29 languages, versus captionrich's 50+.
  • Longer videos: Veed exports beyond 10 minutes on paid plans; captionrich caps at 7 minutes even on Max Pro.
  • SRT/VTT subtitle file downloads for platforms that want closed captions instead of burned-in text.
  • A much broader platform: AI avatars, text-to-video generation, eye-contact correction, brand kits, and team features.
  • A native iOS app alongside the web editor.

If you make short talking videos and want predictable pricing with captions on everything, captionrich does that job for less and without metering. If you need 100+ languages, dubbing, subtitle files, or Veed's generative-AI toolset, its bigger platform earns the bigger price.

FAQ

captionrich vs Veed FAQ

captionrich Pro is a flat $7/month (or $72/year) for 50 videos. Veed's pricing is A/B-tested — its own pages cite a Creator plan from $20/month, while recent third-party guides report entry pricing anywhere from about $9 to $19/month depending on billing cycle and cohort. Whatever variant you see, captionrich's flat rate is lower.

Yes — Veed's own pricing FAQ states the watermark appears on videos created on the free plan and is removed on any paid plan. Free exports are also capped at 720p and 10 minutes, with a limited monthly auto-subtitle allowance. captionrich's free plan exports 3 videos a month with no watermark.

Yes. Veed's Edit by Script tool removes footage when you delete transcript words and is available on all plans, though it currently only supports languages that separate words with spaces. In captionrich, text-based editing is the core of the product — cutting, clipping, and cleanup all happen in the transcript.

Veed, by its own numbers: 125+ subtitle languages and AI dubbing in 29 languages, versus captionrich's 50+ languages for captions and translation. Worth knowing: Veed's subtitles and translations share one metered transcription allowance — translating a 30-minute video into a language consumes another 30 minutes per language — while captionrich doesn't meter captioning by the minute.

Veed uploads your video to its servers, where editing operations and the final render happen in the cloud. captionrich runs editing and export in your browser — there's no server render queue — while your projects, video included, are saved to the cloud so you can resume on another device.

More comparisons

The easiest way to decide? Try it.

captionrich is free to start — 3 videos a month, no watermark, no card required. Upload a video and see the difference yourself.

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