Wavel AI is an AI video editing and localization platform that combines dubbing, subtitles, voice cloning, repurposing, and template-based generation for multilingual training and marketing teams.
Wavel AI is a browser-based AI video editing and localization platform by DOCLE PTE. LTD. that combines dubbing, subtitles, voice cloning, shorts repurposing, and template-driven generation in one stack.
It fits teams that already have scripts, documents, training materials, or existing footage and want to turn them into multilingual video assets without stitching together separate subtitle, dubbing, and edit tools.
It is less ideal for editors who need transparent long-form export specs, frame-level craft control, or a simpler flat-price model that does not require learning yearly credits, AI Twin limits, and feature-specific tradeoffs.
| Feature | Wavel AI |
|---|---|
| Primary use case | Edit, localize, dub, subtitle, repurpose, and template-drive video content for global teams. |
| Best for | Training, marketing, and localization teams that work with existing footage and need multilingual delivery. |
| Access type | Browser-based web app with developer API access. |
| Input types | Scripts, plain text, PowerPoints, documents, SOPs, existing videos, and long-form source footage. |
| Output formats | Not publicly documented. |
| Output resolution | Video Upscale is marketed for HD or 4K output; default generator resolution is not publicly documented. |
| Max video duration | Not publicly documented as a hard per-video cap on the official site. |
| Generation speed | Official site repeatedly says videos can be created in minutes, not hours, but does not publish benchmark timings. |
| Watermark (free tier) | Free plan includes watermarking. |
| Language support | Official pages mention 40+ languages for dubbing, 75+ languages and accents in the training-video hero, and 100+ languages in other sections. |
| API availability | Yes. Wavel links to API documentation and developer API resources. |
| Integrations | Templates plus browser workflows for training, e-learning, localization, subtitles, voice cloning, AI twins, shorts, and upscaling; named third-party app integrations are not clearly documented on the public site. |
| Collaboration | Not publicly documented in detail. |
| Pricing model | Credit-based paid plans plus a zero-dollar trial tier. |
| Free plan | Trial-like free tier with 15 one-time credits, 7 days of access to try tools, and watermarking. |
| Paid plans | Basic $16/mo annually, Pro $26/mo annually, Scale $66/mo annually, each with yearly credit allocations and rollover language on the pricing page. |
Localization breadth is Wavel's biggest edge. The site bundles AI dubbing, video translation, auto subtitles, lip sync, and voice changing instead of forcing global teams into separate vendors.
Editing workflow coverage is broader than many AI video tools. Wavel explicitly supports video to shorts, video revise, video upscale, and face-swap style editing alongside script-to-video and text-to-video creation.
Credits are spelled out more clearly than on many rivals. Wavel publishes how credits map to dubbing minutes, subtitle minutes, voiceover minutes, and yearly allowances across Basic, Pro, and Scale plans.
For a solo creator or small team, Wavel is easiest to justify when multilingual delivery is the main need. If you only need occasional editing, the credit system can be heavier than a simpler editor subscription.
For a training team or agency localizing video at scale, Basic and Pro are more operationally sensible because the pricing page publishes concrete credit conversions for dubbing, subtitles, edits, and voiceovers. That makes capacity planning possible, even if it is not perfectly simple.
Prices are subject to change. Check the official pricing page for current details.
Pro tip: Budget around the workflow that burns the most credits, not the cheapest one. Dubbing-heavy teams and AI-video-heavy teams can hit very different usage patterns on the same plan.
Community links: not found.
We looked for relevant public discussion about this tool on Reddit first, then checked G2, Capterra, Trustpilot, and Product Hunt. At the time of this review, we did not find any links that both matched the allowed source policy and passed the required URL validation step.
That means this section is intentionally limited rather than padded with third-party directory or review-farm pages. If you have hands-on experience with this tool, use the review section below to help future visitors.
Partly. Wavel has a $0 entry tier, but it behaves like a trial because it gives 15 one-time credits and limits downloads, editing, and top-ups.
Yes. The pricing page explicitly lists watermarking on the free tier.
Not publicly documented on the live pricing and homepage materials reviewed for this listing.
Not publicly documented as a benchmark. Wavel repeatedly says videos can be created in minutes, but it does not publish a fixed render-time table.
Both. Wavel explicitly supports video-to-shorts, video revise, video upscale, and other edit-and-repurpose workflows on existing footage in addition to script-to-video and text-to-video tools.
Yes. API documentation and developer API links are published on the official site.
Yes, that is one of its clearest fits. The public site is heavily oriented toward training, onboarding, e-learning, and localization use cases.
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