comparison

Looking for an ezgif alternative? Edit the GIF from a prompt instead of hand-tooling it

the short answer

ezgif is a manual online toolkit for mechanical jobs like crop, resize, optimise and captioning, while aigif is a Chrome extension that takes a GIF you supply and edits it from a plain-English prompt, re-rendering the change consistently across every frame.

ezgif.com has been the default GIF workbench for years, and deservedly so. It is a free online toolkit packed with mechanical tools: crop, resize, reverse, optimise, split, and a manual caption editor. If you know exactly which pixels you want changed, it does the job well.

aigif is a different kind of tool, not a replacement for that toolkit. It is a Chrome extension that takes a GIF you already have and edits its content from a prompt, then re-renders the result so the change holds across every frame. This page lays out where each one fits so you can choose honestly.

every framean AI edit propagated consistently across

Mechanical edits vs. content edits

ezgif is built for mechanical edits: changing the dimensions, the file size, the frame order, or sticking a caption layer on top. These are precise, deterministic operations, and you stay in full manual control of each one. aigif does not do any of this; it will not crop, resize, or optimise a GIF for you.

What aigif does instead is change what the GIF actually shows. You can restyle it into 90s anime or neon, recolour it, swap a detail, rewrite the text into the image, or change the mood, all by describing it. That is a content edit rather than a mechanical one, and it is work ezgif's manual tools are not designed to do.

Why the re-render stays consistent

Naive frame-by-frame AI editing shimmers, because each frame is edited independently and nothing ties them together. aigif avoids that by editing a single keyframe with an image model, then propagating that edit across the surrounding frames using optical flow computed from the GIF's real motion. The result follows the original movement instead of flickering against it.

So the honest split is this: reach for ezgif when you want to crop, compress, reorder, or hand-place a caption with full manual control. Reach for aigif when you want to change the look or content of the clip itself and have that change re-rendered coherently. They solve different problems, and many people will keep using both.

ezgif (manual toolkit) vs. aigif (prompt editor)

ezgifaigif
What it isFree online manual toolkitChrome extension, AI editor
Core jobCrop, resize, reverse, optimiseRestyle, recolour, edit content from a prompt
How you editPick a tool, set values by handDescribe the change in plain words
CaptionsManual text layer you placeText re-rendered into the GIF
Frame consistencyYou control each stepKeyframe edit propagated by optical flow

frequently asked

Can aigif crop, resize, or optimise a GIF like ezgif?
No. aigif edits the content of a GIF from a prompt; it does not do mechanical operations like cropping, resizing, reversing, or file-size optimisation. Use ezgif for those.
Do I still need ezgif if I use aigif?
Quite possibly. They cover different jobs: ezgif for mechanical edits, aigif for prompt-based content and style changes. Many people use both.
Why does aigif's output not flicker?
It edits one keyframe with an AI model, then propagates that edit across the other frames using optical flow from the GIF's real motion, so the change follows the movement instead of shimmering.
What does aigif cost?
It runs on pay-as-you-go credits with no subscription, and new signups get a few free credits to try it.

Last updated June 6, 2026

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