Table of Contents
⚡ Quick Summary
Free stock video doesn't have to mean low quality or copyright risk. Pexels, Pixabay, Mixkit, Videvo, and Coverr all offer genuinely commercial-use footage at zero cost — but licensing terms vary. Know which site to use for which project, filter by the right license, and you'll never pay for b-roll again or get hit with a takedown notice.🎯 Key Takeaways
- ✔Pexels is the safest default u2014 fully commercial, no attribution, massive catalogue updated daily
- ✔Coverr is built for funnel and website backgrounds; looping clips at Coverr.co are optimised for autoplay with no copyright restrictions
- ✔Always filter Pixabay by 'CC0' license before downloading u2014 some clips on that platform carry restrictions you won't see until you read the fine print
- ✔Keep a 'cleared footage' folder on your desktop with only license-verified clips to avoid copyright claims weeks after publishing
- ✔Mixkit's smaller curated library is worth checking for cinematic quality clips u2014 particularly good for course intros and premium-looking ad footage
- ✔Videvo has a rich catalogue but filter by 'Videvo Free License' or 'CC0' before downloading u2014 'Editorial Use Only' clips cannot be used in paid content or monetised videos
🔍 In-Depth Guide
Pexels and Pixabay: The Workhorses for Course Creators
Pexels is my first stop for almost everything. The footage is clean, the search works well, and the Pexels License is genuinely no-strings commercial use u2014 no attribution required, no editorial-only restrictions. I've used Pexels clips in GoHighLevel tutorial videos, Canva course intros, and client ads without a single issue. The business and technology categories are particularly strong, which matters if you're making content around AI tools or automation workflows.nnPixabay is the backup. Slightly older catalogue, interface is busier, but it has footage you won't find on Pexels u2014 particularly outdoor and nature shots that work well as background loops. Both sites are also integrated directly into Canva, so if you're editing there, you can pull footage without ever leaving the app. For anyone building content in the Dubai real estate space, search 'luxury apartment' or 'city skyline night' on Pixabay and you'll find clips that look expensive without costing a dirham.Videvo and Mixkit: When You Need Something More Cinematic
Not all stock video looks the same. Pexels is clean and practical. Videvo and Mixkit push into more cinematic territory u2014 slower motion, dramatic lighting, the kind of footage that makes an intro sequence feel polished.nnMixkit is owned by Envato and has a smaller but highly curated library. Every clip I've downloaded from there has been genuinely high quality. Their license allows commercial use including in paid products, which is critical for course content. The categories they do well: technology, business interiors, and aerial city shots. Videvo requires more attention u2014 some clips are marked 'Editorial Use Only', so filter by license type before downloading. The ones under the Videvo Free License or Creative Commons Zero are safe for commercial use. I recommend bookmarking the filtered search URL so you're never accidentally grabbing the wrong clip. One practical step: create a folder on your desktop called 'cleared footage' and only ever place clips you've verified the license on. It sounds basic, but it saves a lot of stress later.Coverr: The Hidden Gem for Website and Funnel Backgrounds
Coverr is the most underrated site on this list. It was built specifically for website background videos u2014 looping, short, perfectly compressed for fast loading. Most of the library runs between 10 and 30 seconds, designed to autoplay silently behind a headline.nnIf you're running GoHighLevel funnels, this matters more than you think. A well-chosen background video on a landing page increases time-on-page and, in my experience with client funnels, it consistently lifts conversion rates by making the page feel alive without being distracting. The entire Coverr library is under a custom license that allows commercial use with no attribution. Categories I use most: abstract loops, workspace scenes, and outdoor lifestyle. The catalogue is smaller than Pexels but every clip is purpose-built for digital marketing use cases. Go to Coverr right now, search 'Dubai' or 'city night', download three clips, and test one as a background on your next landing page. It takes fifteen minutes and the result is immediately visible.💡 Recommended Resources
📚 Article Summary
Every course creator I’ve worked with hits the same wall early on — they’ve got a great idea, a decent mic, and zero budget for professional video footage. I’ve been there. When I was building my first AI marketing course, I spent three days hunting for a single clean b-roll clip of someone using a laptop in a modern office. That search taught me which free stock video sites are actually worth your time and which are traps filled with watermarked previews and surprise licensing fees.Here’s what most people get wrong: ‘free’ and ‘royalty-free’ are not the same thing. Royalty-free means you pay once (or nothing) and use it forever without owing ongoing fees. But some sites call themselves free, then hit you with attribution requirements, editorial-use-only restrictions, or limits on commercial projects. If you’re using footage in a paid course, a client’s real estate listing video, or a YouTube channel you monetize — those restrictions can actually expose you to copyright claims. I’ve seen this happen to a student of mine who used a clip from a shady site for a GHL funnel video. The takedown notice came six weeks later.The good news: there are five sites I genuinely trust and use myself. Some are better for corporate and tech content — perfect if you’re building AI or automation tutorials. Others have stunning nature and lifestyle footage that works brilliantly for real estate marketing in Dubai, where visuals sell the dream as much as the property specs do. Knowing which site to go to for which type of clip saves hours every week.I also teach this inside my content creation modules because the choice of stock footage affects your brand perception more than most people realise. A pixelated, overused clip signals amateur. The right clip — crisp, contemporary, matching your brand colours — makes your course or ad look like it cost ten times what it did. That’s not about spending money. It’s about knowing where to look.
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