Descript's pricing is clean. Four tiers, straightforward names, nothing too tricky. What's less obvious is which tier actually fits your workflow — and that depends almost entirely on how much you're producing and which features you actually use.
Let me break it down without fluff.
Descript Pricing Overview (2026)
| Plan | Monthly | Annual (per mo) | Transcription | Overdub |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | $0 | 1 hr/mo | No |
| Hobbyist | $12 | ~$10/mo | 10 hrs/mo | Basic |
| Creator | $24 | ~$20/mo | Unlimited | Full |
| Business | $40/user | ~$33/user | Unlimited | Full |
| Enterprise | Custom | Custom | Unlimited | Custom |
Annual billing saves roughly 20%. On Creator, that's $48/year — meaningful over time.
The Free Plan: One Hour Is the Ceiling
1 hour of transcription per month. That's it.
For context: a typical 30-minute podcast episode generates about 30 minutes of transcription time. So on free, you can edit one episode per month, and only if it runs under an hour.
What you do get on free, beyond the transcription limit:
- Full access to the transcript-based editing workflow
- Basic filler word removal (ums, uhs, silences)
- Screen recording
- Standard export quality (up to 1080p)
What you don't get: Overdub voice cloning, unlimited transcription, multicam editing, or high-quality audio export without watermarks.
The free tier is legitimately useful for understanding whether Descript's workflow clicks for you. Editing a transcript to edit video is genuinely different from traditional timeline editing — some people love it immediately, some people find it disorienting. One hour of free transcription is enough to figure out which category you're in.
Hobbyist ($12/month): The Entry Point That Actually Works
At $12 a month, Hobbyist is priced like the right entry-level tier for a reason.
10 hours of transcription per month covers most individual creators comfortably. A weekly 45-minute podcast is roughly 3 hours of transcription per month. A daily 10-minute YouTube video comes in under 5 hours. Unless you're producing at significant volume or recording long-form content constantly, 10 hours is workable.
Hobbyist gives you:
- 10 hours of transcription/month
- Basic Overdub (AI voice correction)
- Filler word removal and silence trimming
- Multi-track recording
- Standard export up to 4K
- Screen recording with system audio
Basic Overdub is worth pausing on. You can train a voice model and use it to patch short corrections — misread a word, stumbled over a sentence. For that specific use case, it works. The catch with Basic Overdub on Hobbyist: the voice model quality is lower than Creator's Overdub, and there are usage limits on how much you can generate. Short fixes: fine. Extensive voice generation: you'll notice the ceiling.
For a solo podcaster or occasional video creator, Hobbyist is the right tier. $12 a month is a low ask if Descript's workflow saves you even 2 hours of editing time.
Creator ($24/month): Unlimited and Full-Featured
This is where Descript opens up.
Unlimited transcription changes the calculus. You're not rationing hours or deciding which content is worth transcribing. You produce, you upload, it transcribes, you edit. The friction disappears.
Beyond unlimited transcription, Creator adds:
- Full Overdub (higher quality voice model, no generation limits)
- Multicam editing support
- Captions and transcript export
- Priority export queue
- More advanced AI actions (eye contact correction, background removal, etc.)
- Unlimited collaboration projects
The full Overdub upgrade matters if you do any meaningful voice correction work. On Creator, the generated audio is closer to your actual voice — the basic version on Hobbyist is detectable on longer fixes. If you're regularly patching 5-10 word corrections into episodes, Creator's Overdub quality makes a noticeable difference.
AI actions are Descript's collection of one-click improvements: eye contact correction (adjusts video to look at the camera even when you're looking at your notes), background removal, studio sound enhancement, and filler word removal. These work on talking-head video, which is most YouTube and podcast video content. They don't work on complex multi-camera or anything requiring real cinematography judgment.
Creator at $24/month ($20/month annual) is where most serious individual creators should land.
Business ($40/month per user): Team Production at Scale
The per-user pricing on Business is worth thinking about carefully if you're a team.
Three users means $120/month. Five users is $200/month. For a small team, the math gets real quickly. Make sure you're comparing that against what your team's actual editing workflow looks like before committing.
What Business adds over Creator:
- Multiple seats (priced per user)
- Team workspaces and shared project access
- Enhanced admin and permission controls
- Advanced collaboration features (commenting, review workflows)
- Priority support
- Custom team folders and organization
Business makes sense for podcast networks managing multiple shows, YouTube channels with an editor and a producer, content teams where someone is recording and someone else is editing, or media companies with dedicated video staff.
The collaboration features are genuine, not just rebranded sharing. The review workflow allows teammates to comment on specific moments in the transcript, which is a more useful review mechanism than sending a file and getting an email back. Not revolutionary, but functional.
One honest note: if you're comparing Descript Business against a traditional video editing setup on Premiere or DaVinci with shared storage, Descript Business is faster to set up and cheaper for dialogue-heavy content. It's not a replacement for complex production work, but for talking-head, interview, and podcast content, the team workflow is competitive.
Enterprise: Custom at Scale
Enterprise pricing is custom. You get everything in Business plus:
- Dedicated account management
- Custom integrations with existing media workflows
- Volume licensing
- SLA guarantees
- Enhanced security and compliance
If you're a media company with 20+ creators or a podcast network at serious scale, that's when you start an Enterprise conversation.
Features by Tier: What Actually Matters
Let me call out the features that drive the decision for most users.
Transcription hours: The most important variable. 1 hour (free) vs. 10 hours (Hobbyist) vs. unlimited (Creator and above). If you produce more than 10 hours of content per month, Creator is your floor.
Overdub quality: Basic on Hobbyist, full quality on Creator. If you regularly use Overdub for voice corrections, the quality difference is noticeable. Basic is fine for short patches. Full quality is noticeably more natural on anything more than 2-3 words.
Export quality: Standard quality on free and Hobbyist. Lossless audio and highest video quality on Creator and Business. If your audio workflow has multiple stages (export to DAW, master, re-import), lossless export matters.
Multi-track recording: Available on Hobbyist and above. Critical for interview podcasts where you're recording yourself and a remote guest separately. Not needed for solo recording.
AI actions (eye contact, background removal): Creator and above. Useful for talking-head video specifically.
Collaboration: Real team features on Business. Creator allows project sharing but not structured team workflows.
Descript vs. Adobe Premiere: Honest Comparison for Audio/Podcast Use Cases
This comparison comes up constantly, so let me be direct about when Descript wins and when it doesn't.
Descript wins when:
- Your content is dialogue-heavy (podcasts, interviews, talking-head video)
- You want to edit by removing words from a transcript
- You're a solo creator without advanced post-production skills
- You need Overdub for voice correction
- Speed of rough cut is more important than precision
- You're a YouTuber or podcaster, not a filmmaker
Adobe Premiere wins when:
- Your content has complex multi-camera setups
- You need color grading or visual effects
- Your edit requires frame-precise cutting of non-dialogue footage
- You have music, sound design, or complex audio mixing needs
- You're doing long-form documentary or narrative content
Plenty of creators use both. Record and rough-cut dialogue in Descript, export a clean audio track, finish audio mastering and any B-roll in Premiere. That workflow isn't unusual.
What Descript doesn't do is replace Premiere for anything visually complex. It's not trying to. The transcript editing model is powerful specifically for speech-forward content, not for cinematic video production.
Who Should Pay for Which Tier
Free: Testing the workflow. One episode, one project, no commitment.
Hobbyist ($12/mo): Solo podcasters doing a monthly or biweekly show. YouTube creators doing 4-8 videos per month under 20 minutes each. Anyone who doesn't need unlimited transcription and can work within 10 hours.
Creator ($24/mo): Weekly podcast producers. Daily YouTube creators. Anyone who uses Overdub regularly. Anyone producing enough content that hour limits are a friction point. This is the right tier for most serious individual creators.
Business ($40/user/mo): Podcast networks, content teams with multiple people editing, YouTube channels with dedicated staff, media companies producing regular video content.
Enterprise: Volume, compliance, or custom integration needs.
The Bottom Line
Descript earns its pricing at Creator level. $24/month (or $20 annual) for unlimited transcription and full Overdub access is competitive for what it delivers. The transcript-based editing model is genuinely different from traditional NLEs — once you internalize it, going back to timeline-only editing for dialogue content feels slower.
If you're not sure whether the workflow clicks for you, the free tier is real enough to find out. One hour of transcription, full access to the core feature. Try it on your actual content before paying for anything.
For a deeper look at the product — actual quality testing, what Overdub produces in practice, where the tool struggles — our full Descript review has the complete breakdown.
Pricing reflects Descript's published plans as of May 2026. Rates and features subject to change. No affiliate relationship — links go directly to descript.com.
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