Free Frame Rate Converter

Convert between frame rates, calculate frames from duration, plan slow-motion capture, and estimate storage requirements.

Supports 24fps (cinema), 30fps (broadcast), 60fps (HFR) and custom values. Learn the differences with the FPS Info tab.

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AI Video Editor

Drop your footage, tell it what you want. Cubix cuts, captions, color grades, and exports — fully on its own. No timeline. No manual work. Just results.

Cinematic Screen Recorder

Hit record on Windows. Auto-zoom, cinematic backgrounds, and studio-quality audio kick in automatically — your screen recording looks edited before you've touched a thing.

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5 Calculator Modes

Duration to frames, frames to duration, FPS conversion, slow-motion planning, and storage estimation — all in one tool.

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Slow Motion Planner

Find out what capture FPS you need for 2×, 4×, 8×, or any custom slow-motion factor at your desired playback rate.

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FPS Info Guide

Learn the pros, cons, and use cases for 24fps, 30fps, and 60fps. Make informed decisions for your next project.

Frequently Asked Questions

What fps should I shoot for slow motion?

For 2× slow motion at 24fps playback, shoot at 48fps. For 4× slow motion, shoot at 96fps. For 10× slow motion, shoot at 240fps. Use the Slow Motion tab to calculate any factor.

What is the difference between 24fps and 30fps?

24fps is the cinema standard — it gives a "film look" with natural motion blur. 30fps is smoother and used for broadcast TV, YouTube, and screen recording. 30fps files are about 25% larger than 24fps.

24fps vs 30fps vs 60fps — which should I use?

Use 24fps for a cinematic look and smaller files in narrative work. Use 30fps for most social and general web video. Use 60fps when you need extra smooth motion, sports, gaming, or higher-quality slow-motion source footage (with larger file sizes at the same resolution).

How many frames are in a 1-minute video at 30fps?

A 60-second video at 30fps contains exactly 1,800 frames. At 24fps it's 1,440 frames. At 60fps it's 3,600 frames. Use the Duration → Frames calculator above.