---
title: "Best Way to Stabilize Shaky Footage in DaVinci Resolve"
author: "Alex Johnson"
category: Tips
excerpt: "Direct methods for using Perspective stabilization, zooming past black borders, and isolating camera lock-offs in DaVinci Resolve."
image: "/cutsio-thumbnail.svg"
tags: "DaVinci Resolve, Stabilization, Video, Best Practices"
---

The best way to stabilize shaky footage in DaVinci Resolve is to use the Edit page Inspector for automatic smoothing, select the correct translation mode (Perspective vs. Translation), and crop out the resulting black borders.

Here are the direct methods to best stabilize shaky footage in DaVinci Resolve.

## What is the fastest way to stabilize shaky footage?
If you recorded handheld video while walking and the footage is unusable due to jitter, the built-in stabilization tool can digitally smooth the movement.

To quickly stabilize shaky footage:
1. Go to the **Edit** page and select the shaky clip on the timeline.
2. Open the **Inspector** panel on the top right.
3. Scroll down to the **Stabilization** section and toggle the switch to turn it on.
4. Click the **Stabilize** button. DaVinci Resolve will analyze the clip in seconds and instantly apply a smooth, steady-cam effect.

## How do you choose the correct stabilization mode?
If you clicked Stabilize but the footage looks warped, distorted like "jello," or the background is bending unnaturally, the default algorithm misread the depth of the shot.

To fix warped stabilization:
1. In the **Inspector > Stabilization** section, find the **Mode** dropdown menu.
2. Change the mode from **Perspective** (which tries to fix 3D rotation and often causes the "jello" effect) to **Translation**.
3. Click **Stabilize** again. Translation only fixes up/down and left/right movements, completely eliminating the warping distortion while keeping the shot smooth.

## How do you fix black borders after stabilizing?
If the stabilization worked perfectly but you now see black edges dancing around the frame of your video, the software had to push the image off-screen to compensate for the camera shake.

To fix black borders after stabilizing:
1. Ensure the **Cropping Ratio** slider in the Stabilization menu is set correctly (default is 0.25).
2. Check the box labeled **Zoom**.
3. DaVinci Resolve will automatically zoom into the footage just enough to push the dancing black borders outside the visible frame, leaving you with a perfectly clean, steady shot.