How To Use Pluraleyes — In Premiere Pro

The how-to is deceptively simple (add media > sync > replace audio), but the why is profound: . PluralEyes turns a 45-minute manual sync job into a 2-minute coffee break. The drift correction alone has saved me from re-syncing interviews that slowly fell out of phase over an hour.

4.5/5

If you’ve ever shot a wedding, a documentary, a corporate interview with B-roll, or any multi-camera scene, you know the drill. You have scratch audio from your camera’s built-in mic, but the real audio is on a Zoom recorder, a lavalier system, or a Tascam. Manually lining up those waveforms in Adobe Premiere Pro—zooming in, nudging clips a frame at a time, creating multi-cam sequences—is the video editor’s version of watching paint dry. It’s tedious, error-prone, and soul-crushing when you’re on a deadline. how to use pluraleyes in premiere pro