| Software | Best For | Price | macOS Native (M1/M2/M3) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Professional multi-cam | Free (Studio: $295) | ✅ Yes | | Syncaila | Long-form podcasts/videos | €69 (One-time) | ✅ Yes (via Rosetta) | | Premiere Pro (Synchronize) | Adobe users | Subscription | ✅ Yes | 1. Davinci Resolve (Built-in Sync) Blackmagic Design’s Resolve has a superior sync engine built into the "Cut" and "Edit" pages. Right-click clips in the media pool > "Auto Sync Audio" > "Based on Waveform." It is free and handles 4K multi-cam effortlessly. 2. Syncaila Designed as the spiritual successor to Pluraleyes. It is a standalone app just for audio sync. It supports modern macOS and costs a one-time fee. The interface almost mirrors Pluraleyes 4. 3. Premiere Pro’s Native Feature Adobe added "Synchronize" (via Clip > Merge). While slower than Pluraleyes for 10+ clips, it is reliable and requires no extra download. Is Pluraleyes for Mac Still Worth It? Yes, if: You are a legacy user on an Intel Mac running Catalina/Mojave, and you already have a paid license. It remains the fastest single-task tool ever built.
If you are determined to use it, search for via legacy download portals (ensure you own a license to respect copyright laws). For everyone else, Davinci Resolve 19 is the modern, free, and superior alternative for audio sync on macOS. Pluraleyes Mac Download
Save your sanity. Skip the old downloads. Sync natively. Have you successfully installed Pluraleyes on your Mac recently? Let us know in the comments below. For more video editing tutorials, subscribe to our newsletter. | Software | Best For | Price |