Extract Frames from Video
Capture one exact moment or turn an MP4, MOV, or WebM video into selected PNG and JPG images.
Extract video frames
Capture one exact moment or create a set of images.
How to extract video frames
Choose a video
Open an MP4, MOV, WebM, or another common video file from your device.
Choose exact moments
Scrub to one frame or create an evenly spaced or timed batch.
Download your images
Select PNG or JPG results and download one image or a ZIP.
Any moment, not only the ending
Use this frame extractor for thumbnails, storyboards, product references, shot matching, continuation images, and image-to-video starting points.
Need the cleanest image near the very end instead? The Final Frame Extractor samples the clip ending and recommends a tail frame.
Frame extractor FAQ
Does my video leave my device?
No. Your video stays on your device while you capture and download frames.
Which video formats can I use?
You can choose common formats including MP4, MOV, WebM, M4V, MKV, AVI, OGV, and OGG when your device can play them.
Can I extract one exact frame?
Yes. Scrub to any moment, step backward or forward, and capture the frame shown in the preview.
Can I extract multiple frames?
Yes. Create 4, 8, 12, or 24 evenly spaced frames, or sample the video at a chosen time interval.
Should I choose PNG or JPG?
Choose PNG for maximum image detail. Choose JPG for smaller files and adjustable quality.
Can I download frames together?
Yes. Select multiple results and download them together as a ZIP, or download one image directly.
How is this different from Final Frame Extractor?
This tool captures any moment or a batch across the video. Final Frame Extractor samples only the clip ending and recommends a clean tail frame.
Can I use an extracted frame for image-to-video?
Yes. Download the image, then upload it as a starting frame or visual reference in Studio.
Turn video into useful still images
A video frame extractor makes it easy to save the exact expression, product angle, composition, or movement reference hidden inside a clip. Manual controls work well for a single precise video screenshot, while batch sampling quickly creates a visual overview of the full recording.
PNG preserves maximum detail for design and reference work. JPG produces smaller files for sharing, review, thumbnails, and storyboards. Select only the useful results before downloading them together.