Seedance 2.0 is ByteDance's video generation model. You give it an image and a prompt, and it returns a short clip with motion, camera work, and synchronized audio. It also takes text-only prompts and reference inputs, but the part most people want is the image-to-video flow, so that's where this guide spends its time.
I'll skip the marketing and focus on what actually changes your output: how to get access, how to prompt it, and which settings matter.
Where to access Seedance 2.0
There's no single "Seedance app." The model shows up in a few places:
- ByteDance's own apps (Doubao / Jimeng) — region-locked and account-gated for a lot of people.
- APIs — BytePlus (official), and resellers like Replicate and fal.ai if you'd rather call it programmatically.
- Web tools that wrap the model — if you don't want to touch an API or manage credits across providers. Seedance2Maker is one of these: upload an image, write a prompt, get a Seedance 2 clip back. No install, no API key.
Pick whichever matches how much setup you're willing to do. The model output is the same; the difference is the wrapper around it.
The basic flow
Image-to-video with Seedance 2.0 is four steps:
- Start from a strong first frame. The input image is your first frame, so composition, lighting, and subject all carry into the video. A clean, well-lit image moves better than a busy or low-res one.
- Describe the motion, not the picture. The image already tells the model what things look like. Your prompt should tell it what happens.
- Set duration, resolution, and aspect ratio. These drive both quality and cost.
- Generate, then iterate on the prompt. First results are drafts. The prompt is where you fix them.
Writing prompts that move
This is where most of the quality lives. A few rules that hold up:
Lead with the action. "A slow push-in as the woman turns her head toward the window" beats "a beautiful cinematic shot of a woman." The model knows what beautiful looks like; it needs to know what to animate.
Name the camera move. Push-in, pull-out, pan left, tilt up, orbit, handheld. These are levers the model responds to directly. If you don't specify one, you get whatever it guesses.
Keep one main action per clip. Short generations (5–10 seconds) don't have room for three things to happen. One clear motion reads better than a crowded one.
Use the audio. Seedance 2.0 generates sound natively. Put spoken lines in double quotes inside the prompt and it will attempt synced dialogue, plus ambient sound and light music. If you want a silent clip, turn audio off.
Example prompt:
Handheld shot, slight shake. The chef plates the dish and looks up. "Order's ready." Warm kitchen ambience, faint sizzle in the background.
Settings that actually matter
- Duration: 5 seconds is the sweet spot for testing. You can go longer, but cost scales with every second, and more time means more chances for motion to drift.
- Resolution: 480p for cheap drafts, 720p for most real use, 1080p when the shot is final. Higher resolution costs noticeably more per second.
- Aspect ratio: match your destination — 9:16 for Reels/TikTok/Shorts, 16:9 for landscape. There's also an adaptive option that lets the model choose.
- Audio on/off: leave it on unless you specifically need silence; it's part of the model and doesn't cost extra.
Iterating without burning time (and credits)
Generate at 480p or 720p while you're dialing in the prompt. Only bump to 1080p once the motion and framing are right. Re-rendering a 1080p clip ten times to fix a prompt is the most common way people waste credits.
If a clip ignores your camera move, make the move the first thing in the prompt. If the motion is too wild, add "subtle" or "slow." If a face distorts mid-motion, shorten the duration.
Quick answers
Is Seedance 2.0 free? The model isn't free to run — every provider pays compute per second. Some surfaces give limited free credits; most web tools are paid. Check the specific tool.
What's the longest clip? Up to 15 seconds per generation, though 5–10 seconds is where it looks best.
Does it do text-to-video too? Yes, but the image-to-video path gives you far more control over the result.
Seedance 2.0 vs 2.5? 2.5 is the newer release (native 30-second single clips, up to 50 reference assets). Until your tool actually exposes 2.5, you're generating with 2.0 — which is already strong for image-to-video.
Wrapping up
The whole game with Seedance 2.0 is the prompt: lead with the action, name the camera move, keep it to one motion, and iterate at low resolution before you commit. The access method is just plumbing — pick the one with the least setup for you. If you want the no-API version, Seedance2Maker runs the image-to-video flow directly in the browser.
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