Keep just the part that matters in seconds.
You know where the good part starts and where it ends — the song inside the school-play video, the question buried in the voicemail, the three pages that matter in the eighty-page report. Mark start, mark end, download.
Mark start and end • Download in seconds
Pick the trimming tool you need
Video, audio, and PDF — the three places this problem actually lives. Cut, split, or extract just the part you want.
The first ten seconds and the last twenty don't belong in the final cut. Trim them off in your browser, no editor needed.
Trim my videoYou don't want the first ten seconds of fumbling or the last twenty of dead air in the file you're sending. Trim them off in seconds.
Trim my audioYour PDF is too long, or you only need part of it. Split it into one file per page, or by the ranges you choose.
Split my PDFYou only need pages 22-27 of a 200-page PDF. Extract just those into a clean new file — the original stays untouched.
Extract pagesWhy trimming a file is harder than it should be
Trimming is the simplest possible idea — 'I know the start, I know the end.' But most software treats it as editing.
Editors treat 'shorten this' like a full project
Video editors want you to drop the clip on a timeline, scrub frame-by-frame, then render and re-encode the whole thing — just to cut two ends off.
Audio tools want a multi-track project. Voice memo apps have no concept of trimming at all. Mobile galleries trim for playback, then save the original anyway.
PDF page extraction is buried behind 'print to file'
Half the time the only path to 'give me pages 12 to 15' is the print dialog with a custom page range. The other half it's a paid feature.
And when it works, the result is a re-rendered file that's lost its text layer, its links, and its bookmarks.
You end up sending the whole thing, with an apology
A four-minute voicemail when the question was one sentence. An eighty-page report when only three pages matter. An eighteen-minute family video when grandma just wanted the cake-cutting.
You apologize, paste a timestamp, and hope the recipient scrolls to the right place. They usually don't.
Trimming is removing, not editing
It shouldn't require a timeline, a project file, or a render queue. Mark the start, mark the end, and out comes a file the same shape as the original — just shorter.
You already know where to cut. The tool should respect that.
“We know what it's like to have the right moment buried inside a longer file — and to send the whole thing because trimming it felt harder than apologizing for it. You shouldn't have to learn an editor to hand over thirty seconds.”
Built for the three places this problem actually lives
Three steps. That's it.
No install, no timeline, no project file.
Open your file
Drop your video, audio, or PDF into the trimming tool that fits.
Mark the start and the end
Drag two handles for video and audio, or pick the pages for PDF.
Download the trimmed file
One clean file, only the part that matters — same format, just shorter.
Without the right trimming tool…
The right moment is in there. The wrong tools just won't let you isolate it.
- You send a four-minute voicemail when the question was one sentence — and the recipient has to scrub through your walk to the office to find it.
- You attach an eighty-page report to a thread that was only about pages twelve to fifteen — and nobody opens the file.
- You ship an eighteen-minute family video when grandma just wanted the thirty seconds of the cake-cutting.
- Your WhatsApp clip won't send because most of it is the floor — and the moment you wanted is buried in the middle.
- Your podcast guest waits while you re-export the whole episode just to clip out four minutes of pre-show banter.
From buried to ready-to-send — in seconds
Before
- The useful part is in there somewhere — but you can't isolate it without an editor.
- You ship the whole file with a 'skip to 12:30' note, or burn twenty minutes fighting a timeline.
- The recipient has to scrub, scroll, or skip pages to find what you actually meant to send.
After
- Mark start, mark end, download — one clean file, only the part that matters.
- The recipient opens it and they're already on the relevant moment.
- No apology, no timestamps, no 'sorry it's so long.'
Everything you'd expect — and nothing you wouldn't
No installation
Runs in your browser. Nothing to download, nothing to update.
No account
Use any trimming tool without signing up or handing over an email.
Frame-accurate and page-exact
Frame-by-frame for video, sample-precise for audio, page-exact for PDF.
Lossless when the format allows
Trim without a re-encode where the codec allows it — no quality lost to the cut.
Files stay private
Your files are never uploaded or shared — everything happens in your browser.
Free to use
Trim as many files as you need. No paywall, no hidden friction.



