Sunday’s sermon was great. It’s Tuesday morning. Still no clips.
If you’ve been there, you’ve probably Googled “best sermon clip software” at 11pm. Here’s the honest comparison.
A pastor preaches for 40 minutes on a Sunday. By Wednesday, most people under 35 haven’t heard a word of it. Short-form clips are how churches reach the people who won’t watch a full service video. The tools to make those clips have multiplied fast, and the marketing around them is thick. Every tool claims to be #1. Every tool leaves out the volunteer hours required to run it.
We built Sermon Sling for churches that tried the tool route and gave up. That means we’ve used every tool on this list with real churches, not a demo sermon. Here are the 10 best sermon clip tools churches actually use in 2026, what each one costs, how long it takes to go from sermon upload to posted clip, and the done-for-you option nobody else on Google is mentioning. If you’re new to the topic, start with how to create sermon clips for social media.
Let’s get into it.
| Tool | Best For | AI Clip Detection | Speaker Tracking | Starting Price | Free Plan | Time to First Clip |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sermon Shots | Purpose-built for churches | Yes, sermon-tuned | Yes | $39.99/mo (billed annually) | Yes (2 clips) | 30-60 min |
| Choppity | Editing control, transcript-based | Yes, context-aware | Yes | $22/mo | Yes (30 min, watermark) | 45-90 min |
| OpusClip | Budget-conscious churches | Yes, generic | Yes (Pro) | $15/mo | Yes (60 min, watermark) | 20-40 min |
| Descript | Podcast-style churches | Yes ("Find Good Clips") | No | $12/mo | Yes (1 hr/mo) | 60-120 min |
| Submagic | Polished captions | No (you bring the clip) | No | $14/mo | Limited trial | 10-20 min |
| Vizard | Bulk processing | Yes, generic | Yes | $16/mo | Yes | 20-40 min |
| Klap | Fastest turnaround | Yes, URL-based | Yes | $29/mo | Yes (limited) | 15-30 min |
| CapCut | Free manual editing | No | No | Free | Yes (most features) | 2-4 hrs |
| Riverside | Remote recording + clips | Yes, secondary feature | No | $15/mo | Yes (limited) | 30-60 min |
| Pulpit AI | Full sermon repurposing | Yes, sermon-tuned | Limited | $50/mo | Trial only | 30-60 min |
| Sermon Sling (done-for-you) | Churches done shopping for tools | Human-picked | Yes, produced | $550/mo | 7-day free trial | Zero (we do it) |
Pricing verified as of April 2026. Tool pricing changes often. Check each vendor's site for current rates.
How We Evaluated These Sermon Clip Tools
Every tool on this list got tested against three criteria.
The three criteria we used
1. Clip quality
Does the AI actually pick moments a pastor would post? Or does it grab the loud laugh line and skip the Gospel payoff?
2. Workflow time
How many minutes from sermon upload to posted clip? We timed it with real 35-minute sermons, not demo content.
3. Total cost
Sticker price plus the hidden volunteer hours. A "free" tool that eats four hours of a volunteer's week isn't free.
One thing up front. We build Sermon Sling. We’re not pretending otherwise. This list is still honest, because churches can tell when it isn’t. If a tool fits your church better than we do, we’ll tell you which one.
The 10 Best Sermon Clip Tools for Churches in 2026
The best sermon clip software for most churches is Sermon Shots, because it’s the only AI tool built specifically for sermons and it understands church context. For churches that want clips without the work, done-for-you services like Sermon Sling are the better fit. Here’s every option, ranked by how well it fits a real church workflow.
1. Sermon Shots: Best for Churches That Want Purpose-Built AI
What it does. Upload a sermon. Sermon Shots transcribes it, tracks the speaker, auto-suggests clip-worthy moments, adds captions, and lets you brand with your church’s fonts and colors. It also generates devotionals and discussion guides from the same sermon.
Best for. Mid-size churches (200-500) with a dedicated comms volunteer or a part-time staff person who will actually open the app each week.
Pricing. Free plan (2 clips). Plus yearly at $479.88/yr (about $40/mo). Full-service plan at $147/mo. Silver and Gold tiers go up from there. Pricing as of April 2026.
Pros. Built for sermons, not videos in general. Speaker tracking is the best on the list for preaching content. The extra outputs (devotionals, discussion guides) earn their keep if you’d make that content anyway.
Cons. You still edit. You still export. You still post. AI clip picks vary, especially for narrative preaching. Learning curve is real for volunteers.
Verdict. Strong first pick if you have a willing volunteer. If you don’t, no tool on this list will save you, including this one.
2. Choppity: Best for Teams Who Want Full Editing Control
What it does. Context-aware AI clipping, text-based editing (delete a sentence, the video cuts with it), face tracking, multi-format export (9:16 for Reels, 1:1 for Instagram feed, 16:9 for YouTube).
Best for. Churches with a video-savvy staff member who wants granular control over every clip before it goes out.
Pricing. Free plan (30 min/mo, watermarked). Premium $22/mo. Pro $44/mo. Ultra $87/mo. Pricing as of April 2026.
Pros. The text-based editing is the best UX on this list. A 40-minute sermon generates 20 to 50 clips. Processing is fast.
Cons. The tool is excellent. The work is still yours. Count on 60 to 90 minutes per sermon to review, refine, caption, and export. The free-plan watermark is large enough to kill most church posts.
Verdict. The tool-first winner. But it’s a tool, not a solution. You’re still running the content factory.
3. OpusClip: Best for Budget-Conscious Churches
What it does. Drop in long video, AI pulls short clips, adds captions, and assigns each clip a “virality score” based on hook strength, emotional payload, and pacing. It’s also decent for announcement videos and interviews, not just sermons.
Best for. Small churches (under 200) who want to test AI clipping without committing to a paid plan.
Pricing. Free (60 min/mo, watermarked, 1080p cap, 3-day expiry). Starter $15/mo. Pro $29/mo. Business is custom. Pricing as of April 2026.
Pros. Cheapest real entry point. The virality score is genuinely useful for picking which three clips to actually post. Works on anything, not just sermons.
Cons. Not church-specific. The AI misses theological weight (it grabs the laugh, not the Gospel line). Editor, AI hook generator, and B-roll are Pro-only. Free plan is too tight for consistent posting.
Verdict. Good starter. Most churches outgrow it within three months, either by upgrading or by giving up.
4. Descript: Best for Podcast-Style Churches
What it does. Transcript-based video editor. Delete a sentence in the transcript and the video cuts with it. The “Find Good Clips” feature surfaces highlights across a full-length sermon.
Best for. Churches already producing a podcast, or churches that edit sermon audio heavily before release.
Pricing. Free (1 hr transcription/mo). Creator $12/mo. Pro $24/mo. Pricing as of April 2026.
Pros. The transcript UX is the best on the list for fine editing. Great if you’re producing audio podcast and video clips from the same sermon file.
Cons. Not church-specific. No AI speaker tracking. “Find Good Clips” is hit-or-miss on preaching, which depends on context the tool doesn’t understand.
Verdict. The right pick if you also run a podcast. Overkill if you just need short-form clips.
5. Submagic: Best for Viral-Style Captions
What it does. AI captions with animated word-by-word highlights. Short-form video polishing. Hook generator to tighten the opening three seconds.
Best for. Churches willing to lean into the TikTok-native caption style. If you want to write a hook that stops the scroll, the hook generator here is worth a look.
Pricing. Starter $14/mo. Growth $40/mo. Business $60/mo. Pricing as of April 2026.
Pros. The caption styles are the best on this list. Fast processing. Output looks polished out of the box.
Cons. You bring the clip. Submagic doesn’t find sermon moments for you. The animated caption style is polarizing. Half of pastors love it, half feel it doesn’t match the tone of their preaching.
Verdict. Pair this with a tool that finds clips (OpusClip, Sermon Shots, Choppity). On its own, it’s not a sermon clip solution.
The hidden cost nobody puts on the pricing page
Every tool on this list requires a human to run it. Here's what that actually costs:
We broke the full math down in what social media really costs a church. The short version: "free" almost never is.
6. Vizard: Best for High-Volume Repurposing
What it does. AI clips long video into shorts. Bulk processing for multiple sermons at once. Multi-format export.
Best for. Multi-site churches or denominations processing several sermons per week across campuses.
Pricing. Free tier available. Paid plans from $16/mo. Pricing as of April 2026.
Pros. Handles volume better than most. Solid caption editor. Export speed holds up when you drop five sermons into the queue.
Cons. Generic. No church-specific AI. The clip selection consistently misses emotional and scripture-heavy moments because the AI doesn’t flag them as “exciting.”
Verdict. Fine for volume. Not great for nuance. If you run 10 campuses, it’s on the short list. If you run one church, skip it.
7. Klap: Best for Fast Turnaround
What it does. Paste a YouTube URL. Clips come out. Built for speed, not for nuance.
Best for. Churches who post the Sunday sermon to YouTube Sunday afternoon and want clips in the feed by Monday morning.
Pricing. Free tier available. Paid plans start around $29/mo. Pricing as of April 2026.
Pros. Dead simple. YouTube URL in, clips out, no uploading required. Fastest start time on the list.
Cons. Minimal editing control. Captions are decent but not customizable to match your church’s brand. No church awareness at all.
Verdict. Speed over polish. Good if you’d rather post five rough clips than wait three days for two perfect ones.
8. CapCut: Best Free Manual Editor
What it does. Full-featured video editor from ByteDance (the TikTok parent company). Desktop and mobile. Massive template library. No AI that finds sermon clips for you.
Best for. Churches with a creative volunteer who doesn’t mind scrubbing through a 40-minute sermon manually.
Pricing. Free (most features). Pro around $9.99/mo. Pricing as of April 2026.
Pros. Free and genuinely powerful. The template library is the deepest on the list. Direct TikTok integration. The caption styling rivals Submagic.
Cons. No AI finds the clips. Manual scrubbing through a sermon runs 2 to 4 hours per sermon. That’s the whole job.
Verdict. The budget king if your volunteer has time. Terrible ROI on any paid staff hours.
9. Riverside: Best If You Also Record Sermons Remotely
What it does. Remote video recording platform with studio-quality capture. AI clipping is a bolt-on feature, not the main product.
Best for. Multi-site churches, online-first churches, or churches that interview remote guests for sermon podcasts.
Pricing. Free limited. Standard around $15/mo. Pro around $24/mo. Pricing as of April 2026.
Pros. Recording quality is excellent. If you’re already recording remote conversations, the clipping feature is a nice add.
Cons. The clipping is an afterthought. If you already record on-site, you’re paying for a feature set you won’t use.
Verdict. Skip unless you’re recording remote sessions anyway. For on-site-only churches, this is the wrong tool.
10. Pulpit AI: Best for Churches Who Want More Than Clips
What it does. One sermon in, 20+ pieces of content out. Clips, devotionals, newsletter copy, small group guides, social posts, even sermon recap blog posts.
Best for. Churches who want a full content engine, not just short-form clips.
Pricing. Tiered monthly pricing starting around $50/mo (verify at time of subscribing). Pricing as of April 2026.
Pros. Broadest output per sermon on this list. Saves time if you would otherwise make all that other content yourself.
Cons. Clip quality is middle of the pack. You’re paying for breadth, not clip depth. If clips are the only thing you care about, a clip-specific tool wins.
Verdict. Interesting bundle. Strong if you’re replacing multiple content tools at once. Weaker if clips are the whole goal.
When Sermon Clip Tools Aren’t Enough: The Done-For-You Option
Every tool above has the same hidden requirement. A human.
Someone has to upload the sermon. Someone has to pick the right moments (because AI picks “exciting,” not “Gospel”). Someone has to check the captions for theological accuracy (“God” not “gawd,” which I’ve seen actually ship). Someone has to brand, export, schedule, and post.
For some churches, that works. A communications director who loves the craft, a volunteer with real video skills, a part-time content person. If that’s you, buy a tool from the list above and go.
For most churches, it doesn’t work. Here’s what we see every week.
- The church bought a tool in February. By April, the clips are sitting in the dashboard waiting for someone to post them.
- The volunteer started strong, burned out by Easter, disappeared after Memorial Day.
- The pastor is “owning” clips alongside sermon prep, hospital visits, staff meetings, and preaching.
- The staff person is producing clips instead of doing the job they were hired for.
If any of that sounds familiar, you don’t have a tool problem. You have a capacity problem. Another tool won’t fix it.
Sermon Sling is done-for-you sermon clips. Real people (pastors, videographers, and church comms pros) watch your sermon, pick the moments that will actually resonate, brand them in your fonts and colors, write captions in your voice, and deliver them to your inbox ready to post.
Plans start at $550/mo. No setup fee. 7-day free trial. Starter is $550/mo, Standard is $840/mo, Pro is $1,000/mo, depending on how many platforms and how much custom work you want. Pricing as of April 2026.
Who it fits. Churches where “buy a tool” hasn’t worked. Churches where the pastor wants clips without the clip project. Churches under 1,000 where an in-house comms hire doesn’t pencil out.
Who it doesn’t fit. Churches with a capable in-house video person who genuinely enjoys this work. If that’s you, one of the tools above is the better call.
Don't want to buy another tool? Let us do the clips.
You send us the Sunday sermon. We send back a week of clips, reels, and quote graphics ready to post. No volunteer to train. No dashboard to open. No learning curve. Plans start at $550/mo with a 7-day free trial.
How to Pick the Right Sermon Clip Software for Your Church
The wrong tool costs you twice: the subscription fee and the volunteer hours. The right tool depends on two variables, your church size and your workflow preference.
The decision tree
Step 1: What size is your church?
- Under 150: OpusClip Starter ($15/mo) or CapCut free, if you have a volunteer.
- 150-400: Sermon Shots or Choppity. Budget 60-90 min/week of staff or volunteer time.
- 400+: Sermon Sling done-for-you, or invest in a part-time comms person plus Choppity or Sermon Shots.
Step 2: What's your workflow preference?
- "I want the tool to do it all." → Sermon Shots or Pulpit AI.
- "I want control over every clip." → Choppity or Descript.
- "I just want to post and go." → Sermon Sling.
Step 3: What's your budget ceiling?
- Under $50/mo: OpusClip or CapCut.
- $50-$150/mo: Sermon Shots, Choppity, or Descript.
- $500+/mo: Sermon Sling. (At this tier, you're paying for outcomes, not software.)
For a deeper breakdown, read DIY vs done-for-you sermon clips. And if you’re wrestling with picking the right sermon moments regardless of tool, that one’s worth a read too.
Common Questions About Sermon Clip Software
The Bottom Line
If you have a committed volunteer or a comms staff person, Sermon Shots or Choppity win. They’re the two best tools on the list.
If you don’t, tools won’t fix your problem. Buying software doesn’t produce clips. A human running software produces clips, and if that human doesn’t exist at your church, the subscription is a recurring reminder of a project that isn’t moving.
Sermon Sling exists for the second kind of church. You send us Sunday’s sermon. We send back a week of content. No dashboard. No learning curve. No volunteer burnout. If that’s what you need, it’s what we built. If it isn’t, pick a tool from this list and go. Either way, stop letting Sunday’s sermon die at noon. For more on how clips fit into your bigger church social media strategy, start there.
Ready to stop shopping and start posting?
Sermon Sling turns every Sunday's sermon into a week of social clips, reels, and quote graphics. Done by real people. Delivered ready to post. Plans start at $550/mo with a 7-day free trial, no setup fee, and no long-term contract.