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How to Remove the Gemini Veo Video Watermark (Free, 2026)

July 10, 2026 · NotebookLM Remover Team

What Is Google Veo?

Veo is Google DeepMind's flagship text-to-video generation model. You give it a prompt — a sentence, a paragraph, sometimes a reference image — and it produces a short, high-fidelity clip with realistic motion, lighting, and camera movement. As of 2026, Veo is one of the most capable AI video models available to the public, and Google has wired it into several of its consumer and creator products:

  • Gemini app — Gemini Advanced subscribers can generate Veo clips directly in the chat interface, the same way they generate images
  • Google Flow — Google's dedicated AI filmmaking tool, built around Veo for scene-by-scene video creation, extensions, and camera control
  • Google AI Studio & Vertex AI — the developer surfaces, where Veo is available via API for building your own apps

Whichever door you come through, the output is the same: a downloadable MP4. And whichever door you come through, that MP4 arrives with a visible watermark baked into the frame.

The Gemini Veo Watermark

Every Veo video generated through consumer surfaces carries a visible brand mark. Depending on the product and tier, you'll see one of:

  • A "Veo" or Gemini sparkle (✦) badge in a corner of the frame, usually bottom-right or bottom-left
  • A "Google" / "Gemini" logo overlay that persists for the full duration of the clip

This is a persistent, on-pixel overlay — it lives in the actual image data of the video, not in metadata you can strip with a checkbox. It behaves almost identically to the NotebookLM Video Overview watermark: a fixed logo in a fixed corner, sitting on top of your content for every frame.

The only official route to a watermark-free Veo export is a top-tier paid plan (Google AI Ultra), and even then availability depends on the surface you generate from. For a student, a marketer, or an indie creator who just wants to drop a clip into a presentation or a social post, paying a premium subscription to remove a corner logo isn't realistic.

The good news: because the watermark placement is predictable, you can remove it for free, in your browser, in under a minute.

A Note on SynthID (The Invisible Watermark)

Before the how-to, one important distinction. Every Veo video carries two watermarks:

  1. The visible logo — the badge/overlay described above. This is what you can remove.
  2. SynthID — an invisible, imperceptible watermark Google DeepMind embeds across the pixels and audio to mark the video as AI-generated. It is designed to survive compression, cropping, and re-encoding, and it is not removable by any consumer tool.

This guide — and our tool — only removes the visible corner logo so your video looks clean. We do not, and cannot, strip SynthID, and we don't recommend trying: SynthID exists for provenance and transparency, and it's there whether you can see it or not. Removing a distracting corner badge from your own content is a cosmetic fix; disclosing that a video is AI-generated when the context calls for it remains your responsibility.

Step-by-Step: Remove the Veo Watermark for Free

NotebookLM Remover's video tool was built to strip the "Made with NotebookLM" logo from Google's AI video exports — and because Veo videos use the same kind of fixed-position corner overlay, the same approach works on Veo clips. Everything runs locally in your browser; your video never leaves your device.

Step 1: Export your Veo video

In the Gemini app, Google Flow, or AI Studio, generate your clip and download the MP4 to your computer. Save the original, full-resolution export — don't screen-record or re-encode it first, or the watermark position may shift.

Step 2: Open the video remover

Go to notebooklmremover.org/video. No account, no sign-up, no email.

Step 3: Drop your file

Drag your MP4 onto the upload zone, or click to browse. The tool reads the video's resolution automatically.

Step 4: Adjust settings

You'll see a few optional controls:

  • Trim ending — useful if your export ends on a branded splash frame; leave it on to cut the tail, or off to keep every frame
  • FPS — keep the original, or re-encode at 15 / 30 fps to shrink the file
  • Cinematic mode — an optional subtle color grade for a more polished look

Step 5: Process and download

Click process. The tool loads FFmpeg WebAssembly in your browser and reconstructs the watermark region from the surrounding pixels. A progress bar tracks the encoding. When it finishes, preview the result, confirm the badge is gone, and download your clean video. The whole thing takes roughly 30–90 seconds depending on clip length and your hardware.

How the Removal Actually Works

The tool uses FFmpeg's delogo filter. Rather than blurring or cropping, delogo masks the watermark rectangle and interpolates replacement pixels from the surrounding area — the same technique professional editors use for wire removal and logo cleanup. The result is a seamless reconstruction of what was underneath, not a smudge or a black box.

This works cleanly on Veo footage because the watermark sits in a corner, over a relatively small region, and stays in a fixed position for the whole clip — exactly the conditions delogo is designed for. If the badge is over a busy, high-detail background it may leave a faint trace, but on the vast majority of Veo clips the corner region is calm enough for a clean fill.

Your Video Never Leaves Your Device

Unlike cloud watermark removers, this tool runs 100% in your browser:

  • No upload — FFmpeg WebAssembly processes the file as a sandboxed app inside your browser tab
  • No server — there is no backend that receives or stores your video
  • No account — no login, no email, no tracking of what you process
  • No practical size limit — the only ceiling is your device's available memory

You can verify it yourself: open Developer Tools (F12) → Network tab while processing, and you'll see zero outbound requests carrying your file.

Manual Methods (And Why They're Overkill)

CapCut object remover

CapCut has a built-in "remove object" / watermark tool. It works, but it's a full editor: you import the clip, track the watermark region, apply the removal, then export — and free-tier exports can carry a CapCut watermark of their own, trading one badge for another.

Adobe Premiere Pro

Premiere can mask and clean the region with a duplicated, offset, blurred layer or the Content-Aware fill workflow. It's powerful and precise — and it's a $20+/month professional application launched to erase a corner logo from a 10-second clip.

Filmora object remover

Filmora offers an AI object-removal feature similar to CapCut's, wrapped in a friendlier desktop UI. Same trade-off: a paid desktop install and a manual masking pass for a job a browser can do in one click.

FFmpeg command line (free, technical)

If you're comfortable in a terminal, you can run the same delogo filter yourself — but you'll need to install FFmpeg, measure the watermark's exact x/y/w/h coordinates for your specific export, and re-tune them if the resolution changes. The browser tool does that measurement for you.

Tips for Best Results

  • Use Chrome or Edge — FFmpeg WebAssembly needs SharedArrayBuffer, which is most reliable in Chromium-based browsers
  • Work from the original export — never remove the watermark from a screen recording or a re-encoded copy; the position won't match
  • Close heavy tabs — video processing is memory-hungry, especially on 8GB machines
  • Always preview — check the output before downloading to confirm the badge is fully gone
  • Keep original FPS unless you specifically need a smaller file

Compare the Free Tools

Veo, Gemini images, and NotebookLM all come from the same Google AI family, and each carries its own watermark style. For a side-by-side of the free removers and which one fits which format, see our Gemini watermark remover comparison. For the video-specific walkthrough on the NotebookLM side, see how to remove the NotebookLM video watermark.

Ready to clean up your Veo clip?

Remove Veo Video Watermark — Free

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this remove the Veo SynthID watermark too?

No. This tool only removes the visible corner logo/badge so your video looks clean. SynthID is an invisible, imperceptible watermark that Google DeepMind embeds to mark content as AI-generated; it's designed to survive editing and re-encoding, and no consumer tool can remove it. That's by design, and we don't attempt to strip it.

Will it work on videos from Google Flow and AI Studio, not just the Gemini app?

Yes. All of them export standard MP4 files with the same style of fixed-position corner watermark, so the delogo approach works regardless of which surface you generated from. Just be sure to use the original download rather than a re-encoded copy.

Is it legal to remove the watermark from my own Veo video?

Removing the visible badge from content you generated is a cosmetic edit of your own file, and the tool never uploads or stores anything. That said, review Google's terms for the surface you used, and disclose that a video is AI-generated whenever the context calls for it — the invisible SynthID marker remains in the file regardless.

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