Beat Visualizer Maker

Drop a beat, watch it come alive. AUDIOVIZOR analyzes your audio in real time and renders GPU-accelerated visuals that react to every kick, snare, and bass hit.

Real-Time Beat Detection

AUDIOVIZOR runs frequency analysis on every audio frame, isolating low-end thumps from mid-range snaps and high-hat sizzle. The result is visuals that feel locked to the rhythm, not randomly pulsing to overall volume.

15+ Reactive Presets

Every preset is designed to translate frequency data into motion. Particle explosions on kick drums, rippling energy rings on snares, color shifts on melodic changes. Pick one that matches your genre and the visuals do the rest.

Export as Video

Once you have the perfect visual locked in, export it as an MP4 video file. Free tier renders at 720p with a watermark. Unlimited gives you clean exports up to 4K -- ready for YouTube, Instagram, or BeatStars.

Built for Producers Who Want to Be Seen

You spent hours crafting a beat. The 808 hits right, the hi-hats roll perfectly, the melody sits exactly where it should. Now you want to share it -- but uploading a static image to YouTube or Instagram means your track competes with thousands of other waveform thumbnails. A beat visualizer changes the game. When your kick drum triggers a visual shockwave and your snare sends particles scattering, people stop scrolling. They watch. They listen.

AUDIOVIZOR is a beat visualizer maker built specifically for this use case. It does not just react to overall loudness like a simple volume meter. It breaks your audio into frequency bands and maps each one to different visual behaviors. Low frequencies drive the biggest movements -- orb pulsations, particle bursts, fog density shifts. Mid-range frequencies control secondary animations like color cycling and ring expansions. High frequencies add shimmer, sparkle, and edge detail. The result is a visual that genuinely feels like it understands your beat.

How It Works

Open AUDIOVIZOR at /app/ and drag your audio file onto the page. It accepts MP3, WAV, FLAC, OGG, and most common formats. The visualizer starts playing immediately with the default preset. Use the preset gallery to browse styles -- you will see the visual change in real time as you switch between them, so you can audition each one against your actual beat without any rendering delay.

Every preset runs entirely on your GPU using WebGL shaders. That means the animations are smooth, high-framerate, and do not bog down your CPU. Even complex presets with thousands of particles and layered post-processing effects maintain 60fps on most modern hardware. You are seeing the final output in real time, not a low-quality preview that looks different after export.

Go Deeper with the Preset Editor

The free tier gives you access to every preset as-is, which is enough for most use cases. But if you want full creative control, the Unlimited preset editor lets you adjust parameters like particle count, glow radius, color palette, audio sensitivity per frequency band, and animation speed. You can make the bass response more aggressive for trap beats, soften everything for ambient instrumentals, or push colors into neon territory for EDM drops.

Unlimited also unlocks text overlays, so you can stamp your producer name, beat title, or social handles directly onto the visual. No need to bring the video into a separate editor just to add a watermark or title card. Everything stays inside AUDIOVIZOR, from audio input to finished video file.

From Beat to Video in Minutes

When you are happy with how the visual looks, hit export. AUDIOVIZOR renders the entire track as an MP4 video using your GPU, so a three-minute beat typically finishes in under a minute. The free tier exports at 720p with a small AUDIOVIZOR watermark in the corner. Unlimited removes the watermark and lets you export at 1080p, 1440p, or 4K, depending on what your target platform needs.

Most producers use these videos for YouTube beat showcases, Instagram Reels, TikTok clips, or BeatStars listings. A reactive visual thumbnail dramatically increases click-through rates compared to a static image. Some producers run AUDIOVIZOR live during beat battles or studio sessions, projecting the visuals onto a screen for an immersive experience. The desktop app on the Unlimited plan makes this especially easy since it captures system audio directly -- no file upload needed.

Pricing That Makes Sense for Creators

The free tier is genuinely useful: all presets, file upload, fifteen-minute sessions, and 720p export. There is no trial period or feature lock -- it is free forever. If you are producing beats regularly and need unlimited session length, 4K export, the preset editor, overlays, and system audio input, Unlimited is $4.99 CAD per month. That is less than a single stock video clip, and you can generate unlimited visuals for every beat you make.

Ready to try it?

No download, no account required. Just drop a track and go.

Try Free

Frequently Asked Questions

Does AUDIOVIZOR actually detect individual beats?
AUDIOVIZOR performs real-time frequency analysis, splitting your audio into multiple frequency bands. Low frequencies (kicks, bass) drive the primary visual motion, mid frequencies (snares, vocals) trigger secondary effects, and highs (hi-hats, cymbals) add detail and shimmer. It is not simple volume metering -- the visuals respond to the spectral content of your beat.
What audio formats are supported?
You can upload MP3, WAV, FLAC, OGG, AAC, and most common audio formats. The browser-based version uses the Web Audio API, so anything your browser can decode will work. For best results with beat detection, use a lossless format like WAV or FLAC.
Can I use the exported video on BeatStars or YouTube?
Absolutely. The exported MP4 is yours to use however you want. Upload it to YouTube, BeatStars, Instagram, TikTok, or anywhere else. The free tier includes a small watermark; Unlimited exports are completely clean.
Do I need a powerful computer to run this?
AUDIOVIZOR runs on your GPU via WebGL, so any computer with a dedicated or integrated GPU from the last five or six years should handle it fine. Most laptops with Intel Iris or AMD integrated graphics run the presets at 60fps. For 4K export, a dedicated GPU like a GTX 1060 or better is recommended.