Adobe Premiere Pro ships with a handful of "auto" features — Sequence from Selection, Auto Reframe, Speech to Text, scene edit detection, and the newer AI Edit features that Adobe keeps rolling into the Sensei toolkit. They're useful. But none of them solve the specific problem of cutting clips to the beat of music, and they all require a $22.99/month Premiere Pro subscription.

Pulse Edit is a one-time €40 plugin for DaVinci Resolve Studio (which itself is a one-time license, not a subscription). It does one thing extremely well: it analyzes a music track, detects every beat, then takes clips from your Media Pool and cuts them to those beats with zoom effects, freeze frames, and AI mood matching.

If you're an Adobe subscriber considering whether to switch your music-driven editing to Resolve, this comparison covers the real tradeoffs — cost, capability, ecosystem, and where each tool earns its keep.

For broader context on the workflow itself, see how to auto-edit videos to music in DaVinci Resolve.

Quick Verdict

  • Pick Pulse Edit + Resolve if you make music-driven content (reels, music videos, montages, sports cuts) and want to stop paying Adobe monthly.
  • Stay on Premiere Auto Edit if you need Sensei AI features beyond music sync, your team is on Adobe Creative Cloud, or you depend on After Effects round-tripping.

Feature Comparison

Feature Pulse Edit Premiere Auto Edit
Pricing€40 one-time (launch, normally €79.99)$22.99/month (Premiere Pro subscription)
Cuts to beatYes — AI beat detectionNo native beat detection
Auto-edit clipsYes — 11 cut patternsLimited (Sequence from Selection)
Zoom effectsYes — 14 easing curves automatedManual keyframing only
AI moodYes — verse vs drop matchingNo
Subscription modelNoYes — required
One-time purchaseYesNo
DaVinci Resolve nativeYes — Studio 18+No
Cross-platformmacOS + WindowsmacOS + Windows

Different problems. Premiere's "auto" features focus on AI reframing, transcription-based editing, and scene detection. Pulse Edit focuses on music-driven cuts. They overlap in name, not in what they do.

The Real Cost Comparison

Pulse Edit is €40 once. DaVinci Resolve Studio is $295 once (or free for the basic version, but Pulse Edit needs Studio for scripting access). Total to get to a working setup: roughly $335 one-time, no recurring cost.

Premiere Pro Single App is $22.99/month or $263.88/year. Over three years that's $791.64. Over five years, $1,319.40. The cost gap widens forever, and you never own anything — cancel and you lose access to the project files in their native form.

That doesn't make Premiere a bad deal. Adobe ships continuous updates and you get After Effects round-tripping that Resolve can't match. But the math matters: Pulse Edit + Resolve breaks even against Premiere within the first 14 months, and pays back many times over after that.

When to Choose Pulse Edit

  • You make music videos, reels, TikToks, sports highlights, travel cuts — anything where music drives the edit
  • You're already in DaVinci Resolve, or willing to switch for one-time licensing
  • You want zoom effects, freeze frames, and speed ramps applied to beats automatically
  • You hate paying monthly for tools you only use sometimes

When Premiere Pro Auto Edit Wins

Premiere is a serious tool with a serious ecosystem. There are real reasons to stay there:

  • You depend on After Effects. AE round-tripping with Premiere is unmatched. Resolve has Fusion (which Pulse Edit uses for zoom effects), but it's not a 1:1 replacement.
  • You work on team projects. Adobe's collaboration tools (Productions, Team Projects, Frame.io integration) are deeply integrated. Resolve's collaboration story is improving but lags.
  • You need transcript-based editing. Premiere's Speech to Text and text-based editing are excellent for talking-head and interview workflows.
  • You need Sensei AI features. Auto Reframe, Scene Edit Detection, Generative Extend — Adobe ships these continuously.
  • Your editor handoffs are .prproj files. If clients send you Premiere projects, switching NLEs adds friction.

The Honest Bottom Line

Premiere Pro is a comprehensive professional NLE with a deep AI feature set. Pulse Edit is a focused tool that does one specific thing better than Premiere does — cutting clips to music beats — in a different NLE that doesn't charge you every month.

If music-driven editing is more than 30% of your work, the math and the workflow both favor switching. If your work is mostly dialogue, narrative, or compositing-heavy, stay on Premiere.

Try Pulse Edit Free — 4 Free Uses, No Credit Card

Cut clips to the beat in DaVinci Resolve. macOS + Windows. One-time €40, no subscription.

Try Pulse Edit free → 4 free uses, no credit card
Comparison based on public information as of April 2026. Premiere Pro and Adobe Sensei are trademarks of Adobe Inc. Pulse Edit is not affiliated with or endorsed by Adobe Inc. Pricing and feature sets may change — verify current Premiere Pro pricing and features at adobe.com before making purchasing decisions.