Every YouTube video needs B-roll — those background clips that play while you're narrating, explaining, or making a point. But sourcing it is a pain: paid libraries are expensive, random Google downloads risk copyright strikes, and manually searching free sites eats hours.
Here's the complete playbook for getting free, safe, high-quality stock footage for your YouTube videos.
The 3 Best Free Sources for YouTube Stock Footage
1. Pexels (Best Quality)
pexels.com/videos — Over 1 million free HD and 4K videos, all under the Pexels License. You can use them commercially, in monetized YouTube videos, without attribution. Search in English for best results.
- No account needed to download
- Strong collection of lifestyle, business, nature, and urban footage
- API available for programmatic access
2. Pixabay (Most Volume)
pixabay.com/videos — 2M+ videos under the Pixabay License. Same deal: free for commercial use, no attribution required. More variety but more variable quality — sort by "Most Popular" to surface the good stuff.
3. Coverr (Curated)
coverr.co — Smaller but hand-curated collection. Every clip has been selected for quality. Great for website hero backgrounds and lifestyle content. Also free for commercial use.
Understanding YouTube Copyright Rules for Stock Footage
Before downloading anything, understand the license:
- CC0 / Public Domain — No restrictions at all. Use freely.
- Pexels / Pixabay License — Free for commercial use, no attribution required. Cannot resell the footage itself.
- Creative Commons (CC BY) — Free to use but requires credit in video description.
- Royalty-Free (purchased) — One-time fee, use as much as you want.
Avoid: Random stock video sites that claim "free" but don't specify a license. These can trigger Content ID claims on YouTube even if you didn't know they were copyrighted.
Manual Download: Step by Step
For a 10-minute YouTube video, this process typically takes 1–3 hours. That's time you could be scripting, recording, or editing.
The Fast Way: AI-Powered Bulk Download
If you publish regularly or work with a content team, manual download doesn't scale. ScriptFlow automates the entire process:
- Paste your script — In any language. ScriptFlow handles Chinese, English, Japanese, and more.
- AI parses scenes — It breaks your script into individual scenes and generates optimized English search keywords for each one.
- Auto-search both libraries — ScriptFlow searches Pexels first, falls back to Pixabay if needed, and picks the best matching clip for each scene.
- Download everything as ZIP — One click. All clips are named and numbered by scene order, ready to import into Premiere, DaVinci, or CapCut.
A 10-scene script that would take 90 minutes manually takes about 3 minutes with ScriptFlow.
Stop hunting for footage manually
ScriptFlow reads your script, finds matching footage from Pexels and Pixabay, and delivers a ZIP file in minutes. Free to try.
Try ScriptFlow Free →Pro Tips for Better Footage Results
Use adjectives to narrow results
Instead of "coffee" try "barista pouring latte slow motion" or "coffee cup morning sunlight bokeh". Descriptive keywords surface dramatically better results.
Mix portrait and landscape
If you publish on both YouTube (landscape) and TikTok/Reels (portrait), download both orientations of key clips. Pexels lets you filter by aspect ratio.
Download at 4K even if you edit in 1080p
4K gives you room to reframe and punch in during editing without quality loss. Storage is cheap; a re-download is not.
Build a personal stock library
Great clips work across multiple videos. Keep a local archive organized by category — city, nature, tech, people, abstract — and reuse freely.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I monetize YouTube videos with Pexels footage?
Yes. The Pexels License explicitly allows commercial use including monetized videos. The same applies to Pixabay.
Do I need to credit Pexels in my video description?
No, attribution is not required. But it's a nice gesture to credit the original creator's name if you know it.
Will stock footage trigger Content ID?
Rarely, from Pexels or Pixabay. These platforms specifically vet their content for rights clearance. Avoid random "free stock" sites that don't specify licensing.
What's the best resolution to download?
Always download the highest resolution available (4K if offered). You can always downscale, but upscaling ruins footage quality.