The best UGC videos rarely come from the most expensive gear. Brands are buying content that looks native to their feed, so the real bar is "clear, well-lit, and authentic," not "cinematic." This roundup is organized by the job each tool does — filming, editing, captions, planning, and running the deal itself — so you can build a setup that fits your budget and skip what you don't need yet. First, an honest note.
Most tools here are third-party. Plug doesn't make cameras or editing apps, and we're not paid to list any of them. Treat this as an editorial starting point, test a couple, and keep whatever gets you posting.
Filming: the kit that actually matters
Four things do most of the work. In rough priority:
- A recent smartphone. Any phone from the last few years shoots sharp, clean video. This is your camera — don't buy a mirrorless rig before deals are paying for it.
- A tripod or phone stand. Steady footage instantly reads as more professional than handheld. A cheap tabletop tripod or a flexible gooseneck clamp is plenty.
- Soft light. A window is the best free light you own — face it, don't shoot with it behind you. A ring light or a small softbox panel helps after dark; look for adjustable brightness and color temperature.
- A microphone. Bad audio kills a good video faster than bad footage. A small clip-on lav mic or a phone-mounted shotgun mic is a cheap, huge upgrade over the built-in mic.
That's the whole starter kit. If you want a shot-by-shot walkthrough of using it, see how to make a UGC video.
Editing apps: what to look for
There are a lot of mobile and desktop editors, and most creators settle on one and stick with it. Rather than crown a winner — features and pricing change constantly, so verify before you commit — here's what actually matters when you pick one:
- Vertical-first. UGC is 9:16. You want clean vertical export with no letterboxing.
- Fast captions. Auto-generated on-screen captions are close to mandatory for social — more on that below.
- A free tier you can ship on. Many editors are free until you hit watermarks, premium fonts, or 4K export. Know where the paywall is.
- Watermark-free export. Brands won't run an ad with another app's logo burned into the corner. Confirm the free tier exports clean, or budget for the paid one.
Categories you'll run into: all-in-one mobile editors (trim, caption, and post from your phone), desktop editors (more control for longer or layered edits), and template-driven apps (fast, but they can look generic if you lean on presets too hard). Start on your phone and upgrade only when a specific limit is slowing you down.
Captions and subtitles
Most social video is watched on mute, so on-screen captions aren't optional — they're part of the deliverable. Most modern editors now auto-transcribe and style captions for you. What to check:
- Accuracy on your accent and any product names — always proofread the auto-transcript.
- Style control — size, position, and a highlight or karaoke effect that keeps eyes on the words.
- Burned-in vs. soft captions. Brands usually want captions burned into the file so they render everywhere. Ask which they prefer before you export.
Planning and organizing: the unglamorous multiplier
The creators who deliver fast aren't faster editors — they plan before they film. Two free things prevent the most reshoots:
- A shot list so you capture every angle in one sitting instead of setting up twice. Grab a ready-made one with the free UGC shot-list template.
- A brief that pins down what the brand actually wants — hook, talking points, do's and don'ts — before a single clip is shot. Start from the free UGC brief template and confirm it with the brand.
Nail these two and your edit gets dramatically shorter, because you shot the right thing the first time. If you want to map out timing too, the free content planner covers scheduling.
Running the deal side (where Plug fits)
Here's the part the camera roundups skip. Making the video is half the job; getting the deal agreed, delivered, and paid is the other half — and it's where creators lose the most time and money. That's what Plug Pro handles:
- Workbench — AI help to draft scripts and hooks, and to sanity-check your footage against the brief before you send, so you're not guessing what the brand meant. See what Workbench does.
- Free templates — the shot-list and brief tools above, plus contract, invoice, and rate-card generators, all deterministic and free to use.
- Agree-and-lock terms and direct payment — you set the price, the brand pays you directly through your own Stripe or PayPal, and you keep 100%. Plug never touches or routes the money, so there's no per-deal cut.
So the gear gets you a great video, and Plug Pro gets you a clean, paid deal around it. Setting your number? How to price a brand deal walks through it.
How to actually choose
Don't buy everything on this page. Start with your phone, a window, a stand, and a cheap mic; pick one editor with free captions; and use free templates to plan. Add gear only when a real limitation — not a shopping impulse — is holding a deal back. The best UGC setup is the cheapest one that lets you ship reliably.
Start your free Plug Pro trial — 7 days free, no card, and keep 100% of every deal you land.