If there's one piece of Mac software that iPad users have been yearning to see land on the tablet, it's Final Cut Pro. Apple's announcement this month that the video editing tool is finally coming to iPad was met with excitement among creatives, and we've been testing out the app ahead of today's official release.
Along with music editor Logic Pro, Final Cut Pro is available to download for iPad from today – and with all-new touch interfaces and iPad-specific tools, it could be a game-changer for editors on the go.
But if there's one thing that sets the iPad version apart from its desktop counterpart, we think it's the Apple Pencil. If you want to try it out for yourself, check out our guide to the best iPads of 2023.
On firing up Final Cut Pro for iPad, it becomes clear pretty quickly that this is a fully-fledged version of the app. The interface will be immediately familiar to Final Cut veterans, but the addition of touch controls really takes things up a notch.
From pinch-to-zoom to the ability to drag and drop clips into the editing space, the whole thing feels as intuitive as you'd hope from a touch-based version of the app. But along with these familiar gestures, a few specific touch-based features truly set this apart from the desktop version.
The brand new jog wheel is an iPad specific tool that lets users scrub through footage or trim and nudge clips. Jog wheels have existed as separate hardware for a while, but with the addition of the Apple Pencil, this software version feels completely natural.
The jog wheel allows a level of precision when scrubbing that feels far more detailed and precise than can be achieved with a trackpad or mouse – literally allowing the user to move frame-by-frame.
Also pretty mind-blowing is Live Drawing. With the Apple Pencil, users can draw anything on top of a video clip, from shapes to text – and have the animation of the actual strokes play at any desired speed. From lyric music videos to cooking tutorials, there's a ton of use-cases where animated text could come into its own.
The third Apple Pencil feature is one that requires the latest model – check out our M2 iPad Pro review for the lowdown. With Pencil Hover, users can quickly skim and preview footage without ever touching the screen, which could have a profound effect on workflow speed. While Pencil Hover debuted last October, it's finally coming into its own – and skimming through footage in Final Cut Pro feels like what the tech was made for.
Indeed, even after some rudimentary hands-on time, it's pretty clear that Final Cut Pro for iPad is neither a straight port of the Mac software, or the 'Light' version that often lands on tablets. Not only is it the real deal, but the addition of touch and Apple Pencil-specific tools make it its own beast.
Final Cut Pro for iPad represents a couple of firsts for Apple. Not only is it the first time one of the company's own 'Pro' desktop apps has made its way to iPad, but at £49/$49 per year or £4.99/$4.99 per month, it's also Apple's first subscription app. While this might be a turn-off for those who like to, you know, own their software, there's no denying that this is the way things are going now – and for iPad power users, those extra touch interfaces might easily make it worth it.
Final Cut Pro for iPad is available now for the 12.9-inch iPad Pro (5th or 6th generation), 11‑inch iPad Pro (3rd or 4th generation) or iPad Air (5th generation) with iPadOS 16.4 or later.