When should you turn on lip-sync?
Lip-Sync is optional and costs extra. It’s powerful when the video actually benefits from it, and a waste of credits when it doesn’t. This article is a quick decision framework.
Enable Lip-Sync when:
Section titled “Enable Lip-Sync when:”- The speaker is on camera most of the time and facing the audience.
- The face is prominent in the frame — talking-head videos, interviews, product demos with a presenter, ads.
- The mouth is clearly visible throughout.
- Sufficient high-quality footage is available: The video must contain at least 10 seconds of clear, unobstructed footage of the speaker’s face for the AI to process the lip-sync accurately.
- You’re publishing to audiences who expect a localized look (social, YouTube, ads, branded content). For these, Lip-Sync adds the visual polish that separates a dubbed video from a voice-over.
Skip Lip-Sync when:
Section titled “Skip Lip-Sync when:”- The speaker is rarely on camera — voice-over videos, tutorials with screen recording, product videos with minimal presenter footage.
- The video is mostly B-roll, animation, or motion graphics with no human face.
- Shots are very wide or the face is too small to benefit.
- The face is frequently occluded (close microphones, masks, heavy beards).
- You’re shipping internal content where the extra polish isn’t worth the credit cost. For these, ship just the dubbed audio with the original video — it looks more natural than a forced Lip-Sync and saves you credits.
How to turn it on
Section titled “How to turn it on”- Open your finished dub.
- Open the Lip Sync tab on the dub detail page.
- Click Start Lip Sync. You’ll see the credit cost before you commit.
- Wait for processing to finish — Lip-Sync runs independently of the main dub and usually takes a few minutes per segment. Lip-Sync is decided per subdub (per target language), so you can turn it on for the languages where it matters most and skip it elsewhere.
1 credit per minute per subdub, on top of the dubbing cost. A 10-minute video dubbed into 3 languages with Lip-Sync for all three: 30 credits dubbing + 30 credits Lip-Sync = 60 credits total. Free trial: Your first Lip-Sync per subdub is free — enough to test the feature on a short clip before you commit on longer content.
Changed your mind after running it?
Section titled “Changed your mind after running it?”You can always download the dubbed-audio version without Lip-Sync — both are available on the dub detail page once processing finishes. Lip-Sync credits aren’t refunded automatically if you decide not to use the result, so use the free-trial to preview before running it on longer content.