Edit an MP4 by importing the file, trimming the timeline, adding fixes, then exporting a new MP4 at 1080p or 4K.
A rough MP4 usually needs three edits before it feels ready: cut the dead air, fix the frame, and save a fresh copy that still looks sharp. That is the practical heart of how to edit an MP4 video on a Windows PC, Mac, Chromebook, or compatible desktop browser.
Use a timeline editor when you need more than a simple file conversion. Microsoft Clipchamp is a good first choice for everyday MP4 work because it runs on Windows and the web, handles trimming, splitting, text, audio, resizing, and MP4 export without forcing you into a pro editor.
Use A Timeline Editor, Not A Converter
A timeline editor changes the content of an MP4; a converter mainly changes the file type. MP4 editing means cutting scenes, rearranging clips, adjusting sound, adding text, changing the shape, or exporting a smaller share-ready copy.
A converter can be fine when the only problem is format compatibility. For a video that has a bad opening, silence at the end, black bars, or a section you want removed, open the MP4 in an editor instead.
Editing An MP4 File In Clipchamp: Cuts, Text, Audio
Clipchamp edits an MP4 by placing the file on a timeline, then saving the edited project as a new MP4. The original file stays on your computer, so you can export a changed copy without overwriting your source video.
- Open Microsoft Clipchamp and sign in with your Microsoft account.
- Select Create a new video.
- Select Import media, choose your MP4, then add it to Your media.
- Drag the MP4 from Your media down to the timeline.
- Select the clip on the timeline so the trim handles appear at both ends.
- Drag the left or right trim handle inward to remove the start or end.
- Move the playhead to a bad section, select Split, click the unwanted piece, then press Delete.
- Select Text, Audio, or Transitions from the side toolbar when the video needs labels, music, or a smoother join.
The timeline shows each remaining clip in sequence, and the preview window plays only the edited version. Your source MP4 is still unchanged outside the project.
What Should You Change Before Export?
The first MP4 edit should remove anything the viewer should not see or hear. After the cut feels tight, fix the frame, sound, and labels so the exported file does not need another pass.
Work from the largest mistake to the smallest polish. A misspelled title is easy to change late; a missing scene or bad cut can force you to rebuild the timing.
| MP4 Edit | Use It When | Control To Use |
|---|---|---|
| Trim start or end | The video has dead air, countdowns, or a late stop | Drag the clip’s trim handles |
| Remove a middle section | A mistake, pause, or private moment sits inside the clip | Use Split, then Delete |
| Join two MP4 files | Two clips should play as one video | Place both clips side by side on the timeline |
| Resize the frame | A horizontal video needs a vertical or square version | Change the aspect ratio, then fill or fit the clip |
| Add a title | The viewer needs a name, date, label, or opening card | Drag a title from Text onto the timeline |
| Mute bad sound | Wind, room noise, or background talk hurts the clip | Lower volume or detach and delete the audio |
| Add music | The video has no useful sound or needs pace | Add an audio track under the video clip |
| Add captions | Speech matters and viewers may watch with sound off | Use the captions tool, then review the wording |
Cut The Timeline Without Breaking The Story
Timeline cuts feel smoother when each edit preserves the viewer’s sense of time, place, and action. Trim silence and mistakes, but leave a little breathing room before someone speaks or a scene changes.
For a middle removal, split once at the start of the bad part and once at the end. Delete only the center piece, then play across the join. If the cut feels harsh, add a short transition or leave a half-second of natural motion before the split.
Fix Shape, Sound, And Text After The Cut
Frame and sound fixes should happen after the main cutting is done. Changing size or audio before cutting can waste time on scenes you later remove.
Choose the video shape based on where the MP4 will be watched. Use 16:9 for YouTube, presentations, and most websites; use 9:16 for Shorts, Reels, and TikTok; use 1:1 when a square social post matters more than full-screen playback.
- Crop only when the subject stays inside the frame for the whole shot.
- Fit the clip when you need to preserve the full picture, even if black bars appear.
- Lower music under speech so words stay easy to hear.
- Keep titles short enough to read in two seconds.
Which Export Setting Should You Choose?
The export setting should match where the MP4 will be used, not just the largest number in the menu. Higher resolution creates a larger file and can take longer to finish.
Microsoft says finished Clipchamp projects can be downloaded as MP4 files, with 480p, 720p, 1080p, and 4K listed as video export choices on its Clipchamp export page. For most web, school, work, and social clips, 1080p is the safer default.
| Finished Video Use | Export Choice | Why It Fits |
|---|---|---|
| Draft for review | 480p | Small file for checking cuts and text |
| Simple social share | 720p | Decent picture with a lighter upload |
| YouTube, website, class, or work | 1080p | Sharp HD picture without the size of 4K |
| 4K source footage | 4K | Use when the original is 4K and your account allows 4K export |
| Very short animation | GIF | Works for clips of 15 seconds or less |
Save A New MP4 Without Rework
The final export should be a separate file with a name you can recognize later. Save the edited MP4 beside the original, then keep the source file until you have watched the export from start to finish.
- Play the edited video from the start and pause at each text screen.
- Listen once with headphones to catch audio clicks, harsh cuts, or music that covers speech.
- Select Export in the top-right corner.
- Choose 1080p for most finished MP4 files, or 4K only when the source and account both make it worthwhile.
- Wait for the progress bar to finish, then open the exported MP4 from your downloads or chosen folder.
The finished file should play as one new MP4 with your cuts, titles, sound, and shape changes baked in. If export stalls, close other apps, keep the editor tab active, try a lower resolution, or split a long project into shorter parts and export each part separately.
References & Sources
- Microsoft.“Exporting and saving a video in Clipchamp”States Clipchamp’s MP4 export format and current video resolution choices.
- Microsoft Clipchamp.“Online video editor by Microsoft Clipchamp”Official site for the video editor used in this article.
