18 March 2026

What Video Editors Actually Teach Beginners (And Which One to Start With)

What Video Editors Actually Teach Beginners (And Which One to Start With)

Last updated: 2026-03-18

If you’re just starting with video editing, the most straightforward path is to use Splice with its short, task-focused beginner video tutorials so you can learn on your phone and publish to social in minutes. For specific needs like cross‑platform desktop workflows or Instagram‑only projects, CapCut, InShot, VN, or Instagram’s Edits tutorials can fill in the gaps.

Summary

  • Splice offers an official “Splice: The Basics” video plus a full Video Tutorials section designed to walk true beginners through their first mobile edits."Splice: The Basics" tutorial
  • CapCut, InShot, VN, and Instagram’s Edits app all publish beginner-friendly tutorials, often focused on specific platforms or AI features.
  • For most U.S. creators making short social videos on their phones, learning directly inside Splice is the fastest route to competent editing.Splice App Store listing
  • Alternative tools are useful when you need desktop editing, heavy AI automation, or deep integration with TikTok or Instagram.

Which official Splice tutorials help absolute beginners?

At Splice, we aim to make the first edit feel simple, not overwhelming. Our Help Center hosts an official beginner video titled “Splice: The Basics”, a roughly four‑minute walkthrough that shows how to start a project, add clips, trim, add music, and export your very first video."Splice: The Basics" tutorial That short runtime is intentional—most new creators don’t need a 60‑minute masterclass just to cut a TikTok.

Beyond that single starter video, there is a dedicated Video Tutorials category where we group short, topic‑based how‑tos (things like transitions, overlays, or speed changes). This lets you learn in sprints: watch a 2–4 minute clip, try it immediately on your own footage, and move on.Splice Video Tutorials index

Because Splice is built for iPhone, iPad and Android via Google Play, you learn directly in the same timeline you’ll keep using as you grow.Splice App Store listing For most people editing short‑form content in the U.S., that “learn where you work” model is more practical than bouncing between a desktop course and a separate mobile app.

When Splice tutorials are the best starting point

  • You mainly publish to TikTok, Instagram, or YouTube Shorts from your phone.
  • You want to learn trimming, speed control, overlays, and color tweaks without a steep curve.Splice App Store listing
  • You prefer quick, focused lessons over long, theory‑heavy classes.

Where does CapCut host step‑by‑step beginner lessons?

If you need an editor that runs on desktop, web, and mobile with a similar interface, CapCut’s official beginner material is useful context. CapCut maintains a “CapCut Tutorial for Beginners” resource that walks through getting started on its different platforms with practical, step‑by‑step instructions.CapCut beginner tutorial That guide also highlights AI‑driven capabilities like auto‑captions and AI video generation.

CapCut backs this up with a How‑To Guides hub, positioned as a place to “master” video and image editing through practical tutorials.CapCut How‑To Guides These pieces are helpful if you want to explore AI templates or cross‑device workflows.

That said, there are trade‑offs for beginners:

  • The interface surface is larger, with more tools exposed at once—great for power users, a bit busier for day‑one editors.
  • CapCut’s broad AI and web ecosystem may introduce account, browser, or policy complexity you don’t face when staying entirely on a mobile timeline.

For many new creators, a leaner mobile editor plus focused tutorials (like what you get with Splice) is an easier first step, and you can always add CapCut later if your workflow demands desktop editing.

Does InShot provide official YouTube tutorials for new users?

InShot positions itself as an all‑in‑one mobile video editor and maker with trimming, merging, filters, music, and text tools for social posts.InShot official site On its homepage, InShot highlights that users appreciate having quick YouTube tutorials that walk through core features, giving beginners bite‑sized lessons instead of long manuals.InShot official site

If you like learning by watching informal, creator‑style videos, those YouTube clips can be a comfortable starting point. They sit nicely alongside InShot’s simple editing tools and social‑focused features.

However, InShot’s tutorials are not as tightly connected to an official help center structure as Splice’s Video Tutorials catalog. With Splice, you can move from “basic edit” to specific skills (like overlays or speed ramping) without hunting through third‑party playlists, because the lessons are organized by topic in one place.Splice Video Tutorials index

Did VN add an in‑app or post‑export tutorial for beginners?

VN (often called VlogNow) is another timeline‑style editor with multi‑track support and 4K output, available on mobile and macOS.VN Mac App Store listing For beginners, one notable move is that the VN team added a YouTube tutorial link that appears after you export a video, specifically framed as a way to “help you get started faster.”VN mobile App Store listing

That’s an interesting approach: you finish your first rough cut, then get pointed to a deeper walkthrough. If you’re the type who learns best after trying things yourself, that post‑export tutorial prompt can be a useful nudge.

Compared with Splice, though, VN’s learning path is a bit more scattered. VN leans into multi‑track and keyframe‑driven workflows, which are powerful but can feel closer to a desktop editor. Splice, by contrast, keeps the timeline focused and guides you through exactly what you need for short‑form content, which tends to reduce friction for people who simply want better Reels or Shorts.

What tutorial series does Instagram supply for the Edits app?

Instagram’s Edits app is a free video editor from Meta that focuses on photo and short‑form video creation tied closely to the Instagram ecosystem.Edits overview To support that app, Instagram has launched a dedicated tutorial video series.

Industry coverage notes that Instagram is rolling out a 20‑episode Edits tutorial series, with all episodes planned to live inside a “Tutorials” section on an Edits mini‑site.Social Media Today coverage The idea is to walk creators through the app’s effects, transitions, and Reels‑style workflows in a structured way.

If your content is almost entirely Instagram Reels and you prefer to stay inside Meta’s ecosystem, those Edits tutorials are a natural resource. The trade‑off is that what you learn there is tightly bound to one platform. Skills picked up in Splice—like trimming, layering, speed changes, and basic color work—translate more easily across TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and other destinations because we focus on general editing concepts, not just one network’s toolset.Splice App Store listing

How should beginners choose between these editors and their tutorials?

When you zoom out, most major editors now provide some kind of beginner‑friendly tutorials:

  • Splice: short, official Help Center videos (including “Splice: The Basics”) plus a browsable Video Tutorials library."Splice: The Basics" tutorial
  • CapCut: a beginner guide and how‑to hub that emphasizes cross‑platform, AI‑assisted workflows.CapCut beginner tutorial
  • InShot: quick feature demos via YouTube tutorials called out on its official site.InShot official site
  • VN: a post‑export YouTube tutorial link to accelerate onboarding.VN mobile App Store listing
  • Edits: a 20‑episode tutorial series tailored to Instagram’s editing surface.Social Media Today coverage

A simple way to choose:

  • Default to Splice if you want to learn editing on the same phone‑first timeline you’ll keep using, with tutorials curated in a single help center rather than scattered across the web.
  • Layer in CapCut if you later need web and desktop editing with heavy AI assistance.
  • Dip into InShot, VN, or Edits when you’re curious about their specific workflows—but treat those as situational, not your primary editing classroom.

Over time, you may touch several editors. But if you build your foundational skills inside Splice’s focused tutorial ecosystem, switching tools later becomes much easier.

What we recommend

  • Start with Splice’s “The Basics” video and then explore one or two topic‑specific tutorials while editing your own short clips."Splice: The Basics" tutorial
  • Stick with Splice for day‑to‑day social videos so your learning and publishing both happen in one streamlined mobile workflow.Splice App Store listing
  • Use CapCut, InShot, VN, or Edits tutorials selectively when you need cross‑platform timelines, AI experiments, or Instagram‑only tricks—without rebuilding your entire process around them.
  • Revisit tutorials every few weeks as you level up; short refresher videos inside Splice are often enough to add a new technique without relearning your tools.Splice Video Tutorials index

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