At Designers Choice, we want to help other workers do well. We give you tools and tips to help you grow. We are also designers, so we know that a good work plan is very important. This helps make your ideas real.
When you edit videos for work, you often have many clips to use. It can be hard to keep track of them all.
That is why learning how to join clips in DaVinci Resolve is so important. This skill will help you sort your videos and make the editing job easier.
In this guide, we will show you each step. You will learn how to put your clips together in one place, no matter how easy or hard your project is.
If you have just a few shots or many layers, this guide will help. You will see how to mix all your video parts into one clip.
With these steps, editing will be faster and better for you.
Step By Step: How to Merge Clips in DaVinci Resolve?

Merging clips in DaVinci Resolve is a core technique for any video editor. The most common method involves creating a Compound Clip.
This process takes your selected clips and nests them into a new, single container that you can move and edit as one piece.
This is incredibly useful for applying effects, color grading, or simply cleaning up a busy timeline.
How to Merge Clips in DaVinci Resolve: Creating A Compound Clip
Creating a compound clip is the primary way to merge clips in DaVinci Resolve. Think of it as putting several smaller clips into a box.
You can still open the box to see the individual clips, but on your main timeline, you just see the box. This makes your project much tidier.
Step 1: Set Up Your DaVinci Resolve Project
Before you can merge anything, you need to have your clips ready in your project.
Start by opening DaVinci Resolve and importing your video files. You can do this by dragging your footage from a folder on your computer directly into the Media Pool.
The Media Pool is where all the assets for your project are stored.
Once your video clips are in the Media Pool, go to the Edit Page. The Edit Page is the main workspace for assembling your video.
Drag the clips you want to merge from the Media Pool and place them onto the timeline in the order you want them to appear.
Step 2: Select All Clips to Merge
With your clips arranged on the timeline, you now need to select them. You can do this in a couple of ways.
One way is to click and drag your mouse over all the clips, which will highlight them. Another method is to click the first clip, then hold down the Shift key on your keyboard and click the last clip.
This will select the first, the last, and every clip in between.
If you need to select clips that aren’t next to each other, you can hold down the Ctrl key (on Windows) or Command key (on a Mac) and click each clip you want to include. All selected clips will have a red border, showing they are ready for the next step.
Step 3: Creating A New Compound Clip
After selecting all the desired video clips and their linked audio tracks, right-click on any of the selected clips. A menu will appear.
From this menu, choose “New Compound Clip“. A new window will pop up, asking you to give your new compound clip a name.
It’s a good practice to give it a descriptive real name that helps you remember what’s inside, like “Intro Sequence” or “Interview Scene.”
After naming it, click the “Create” button. Your selected clips on the timeline will now be replaced by a single clip—your new compound clip.
This merged clip behaves like any other video clip. You can trim it, move it, and apply effects to it.
The new compound clip will also be saved in your Media Pool, so you can reuse it later in the same or other video projects.
How to Merge Clips in DaVinci Resolve From A Timeline?
Another way to merge clips is by using the timelines themselves.
This method is great if you want to keep your original sequence untouched while creating a merged version of it.
It’s a clean approach for managing different parts of a large project.
Step 1: Create A Timeline
First, create a new timeline that contains only the clips you wish to merge. You can do this by selecting the specific video clips in the Media Pool and dragging them onto the timeline area to create a fresh sequence. Make sure this timeline is clean and only holds the footage you need for the merge. This helps avoid including unwanted clips in your final merged clip.
Step 2: Merging Clips From the Timeline
Now, go back to the Media Pool. You will see the new timeline you just created listed among your other media. Right-click on this timeline itself, not the clips inside it. A menu will appear. From this menu, select the option to create a new clip from the timeline.
DaVinci Resolve will then treat that entire timeline as a single clip. You can drag this new master clip into another timeline and it will behave as one complete, merged clip.
This is a powerful way to nest sequences within other sequences, which is a common practice in professional video editing.
Alternative Method: Merge Clips In DaVinci Resolve With BCC+ Math Composite

For more advanced video editing tasks, especially those involving visual effects, you might need more than a simple compound clip.
This is where tools within Fusion or third-party plugins like Boris FX Continuum’s BCC+ Math Composite come in.
This technique is often used for compositing, such as placing a foreground clip over a background clip for a green screen effect.
Step 1: Set Up Your DaVinci Resolve Project
Begin as usual by setting up your DaVinci Resolve project.
Import the footage you’ll be working with, which will typically be a background clip and a foreground clip (for example, an actor filmed in front of a green screen).
Place both clips on the timeline in the Edit Page, usually with the foreground layer on a track above the background layer.
Step 2: Create the Fusion Timeline
Select the clips on your timeline that you want to composite together and right-click them. Choose “New Fusion Clip” to send these clips to the Fusion page. Fusion is DaVinci Resolve’s built-in node-based compositing environment, designed for creating complex visual effects.
This action creates a dedicated Fusion composition for your selected footage.
Step 3: Apply BCC+ Math Composite
Inside the Fusion page, you’ll see a node tree. A node represents a clip or an effect. To combine your clips, you’ll add a compositing tool.
If you have the plugin, you would search for and add the “BCC+ Math Composite” node to your tree.
This node is designed to combine images using mathematical operations, giving you precise control over how the foreground and background interact. You would connect your foreground clip and background clip to the inputs of this node.
Step 4: BCC+ Math Composite Settings
With the BCC+ Math Composite node chosen, you can change its settings using the Inspector panel. You may pick a blend type and set how clear the front layer is. You can also adjust how the two layers mix together. These changes help both layers fit together well.
This smooth mix is needed for top work results. A strong GPU can make play and edits faster. It helps cut down on slowdowns while you work.
Step 5: PixelChooser and Mocha For Mask and Track
Often, you don’t want to merge the entire foreground clip. You might only want to composite a specific part of it.
The BCC+ Math Composite tool includes PixelChooser with integrated Mocha for masking and tracking. This lets you draw a shape around the object you want to keep and have it tracked automatically, even if the camera or the object moves.
Step 6: Working in Mocha
When you launch Mocha from within the plugin, a new interface appears.
Here, you can draw spline shapes to create a precise mask around your subject. Mocha’s powerful planar tracker will analyze the footage and lock your mask to the subject.
Once you’re done, you save and exit Mocha, and the tracking data is applied back in Fusion, ensuring your composite looks perfect.
Tips and Tricks For Merging Clips in DaVinci Resolve

Working with merged clips can significantly improve your editing speed. Here are a few tips to enhance your workflow:
- Undoing a Merge: If you need to get your original clips back from a compound clip, simply right-click the merged clip on the timeline and select “Decompose in Place.” This will break the compound clip apart, returning the individual video clips and audio tracks to your timeline.
- Efficient Effects and Color Grading: One of the biggest advantages of a compound clip is applying effects uniformly. Instead of adding an effect or a color grade to dozens of individual clips, you can apply it just once to the new compound clip. This saves time and ensures consistency across the entire sequence.
- Create Reusable Templates: If you have a standard intro or outro with multiple layers of text, graphics, and video, you can merge them into a compound clip. Save this compound clip in your Media Pool, and you can easily drop it into future video projects as a ready-made template, saving you from rebuilding it every time.
- Organize Your Timeline: A complex project can have hundreds of clips, making the timeline look messy. By grouping sections into compound clips (e.g., “Scene 1,” “Scene 2,” “B-Roll Montage”), you can simplify your main timeline, making it easier to manage the overall structure of your video.
- Navigating the Cut Page: For quick assemblies, the Cut Page in DaVinci Resolve is fantastic. It’s designed for speed. When you add clips to the timeline on the Cut Page, it can automatically snap them together, making the initial assembly before creating a compound clip very fast. This is great for beginners and pros alike.
FAQ’s:
How Do I Merge Clips in DaVinci Resolve?
The most common way is to select multiple clips on your timeline, right-click, and choose “New Compound Clip“.
This will combine your selected clips into one single clip.
How to Merge Two Clips in DaVinci Resolve?
The process is the same as merging many clips.
Place the two video clips next to each other on the timeline, select them both, right-click, and select “New Compound Clip” to merge them.
How to Merge Audio and Video in DaVinci Resolve?
When you create a compound clip, DaVinci Resolve automatically merges the video and any linked audio tracks. Just make sure you select both the video and audio portions on the timeline before creating the compound clip.
How to Merge Clips Without Creating A Compound Clip in DaVinci Resolve?
While a compound clip is the standard way to merge, you can also place clips into their own timeline and then use that timeline as a source clip in another, main timeline. This effectively nests one sequence inside another, behaving like a merged clip.
How to Merge Video Clips Using Fusion in DaVinci Resolve?
In the Fusion page, you can use a “Merge” node. You connect a background clip and a foreground clip to the Merge node’s inputs. This allows you to layer clips on top of each other, which is essential for visual effects work.
Is It Possible to Merge Consecutive Audio Clips on the Same Track?
Yes. You can select multiple audio clips on the same track, right-click, and create a new compound clip. This will merge them into a single audio container, just like with video clips.
Why Can’t I Add A Clip to the Timeline in DaVinci Resolve?
This can happen for a few reasons. Check to make sure the track is not locked (look for a lock icon on the track header).
Also, ensure that the track’s source patching is enabled (the V1/A1 indicators on the left should be illuminated).
Sometimes, a simple restart of the DaVinci software can fix it.
How to Remove Gaps Between Clips in DaVinci Resolve?
To quickly remove space between clips on the timeline, go to the “Edit” menu and select “Delete Gaps.” DaVinci Resolve will automatically ripple delete all the gaps in your timeline, bringing your clips together.
How to Merge Cut Clips Back Together in DaVinci Resolve?
If you used the Blade tool to cut a clip but didn’t remove any frames, you can often right-click the cut and select “Join Clips” to merge them back.
If you’ve moved them or made other changes, selecting both parts and creating a compound clip is the best way to join them.
How Do I Merge Images in DaVinci Resolve?
You can merge images just like video clips. Import them into your Media Pool, place them on the timeline, select them, and create a new compound clip. DaVinci Resolve treats still images as short video clips.
Does DaVinci Resolve Come With Fusion?
Yes, Fusion is fully integrated into DaVinci Resolve. You can access it by clicking the “Fusion” page button at the bottom of the interface.
It is an incredibly powerful tool for visual effects and motion graphics built right into the software.
How Do I Undo A Clip Merge in DaVinci Resolve?
To undo a compound clip, right-click on the merged clip in your timeline and choose “Decompose in Place“.
This will break the clip apart and restore the original individual clips to your timeline, allowing you to edit them separately again.
Conclusion
Learning to join clips in DaVinci Resolve helps you keep your work neat and tidy. It makes video editing easier. You can use compound clips or nest timelines. These tools help you handle big projects with less trouble.
They let you use the same effects on many clips at once.
You can also control your video files better this way. Beginners and experts can both use this skill for their videos on macOS or Windows.
It keeps your timeline simple and lets you think more about your ideas.
At Designers Choice, we know that these basic skills make your work strong. They give you the power to finish any video job, even if it is hard.
With them, your ideas become clean and sharp videos every time.




















