Insta360 GPS overlay
Put speed, GPS, and telemetry on your Insta360 footage. Reframe your shot, sync the data you logged, and export an overlay you key over the finished video.
free to try, works right in your browser
186
KM/H
How to add a Insta360 overlay
Four steps from raw footage to a finished overlay you key into any editor.
Reframe your Insta360 shot
Export the flat, reframed clip from Insta360 Studio first, since that is the footage your overlay sits on.
Import your telemetry
Bring in a CSV, Garmin FIT, or VBO log with speed and GPS. Column detection maps the standard channels automatically.
Load the clip and sync
Add the reframed video as a reference and line the data up to the action on the timeline.
Export the overlay
Render on a chroma-key background and key it out in your editor.
Export the overlay. Finish anywhere.
Overspeed renders your gauges on a chroma-key background. Key it out in one step in CapCut, Premiere, DaVinci Resolve, or Final Cut, and the overlay sits right on your video.
Frequently asked questions
Should I reframe before or after adding the overlay?
Reframe first. Overspeed exports an overlay sized to a standard flat video, so build it against the reframed clip you plan to publish.
Does my Insta360 footage get uploaded?
No. Your video never leaves your machine. Editing and rendering happen in your browser; only telemetry syncs to your project.
Can I build a custom gauge for my Insta360 overlay?
Yes. Describe it and the AI Studio builds a fully styled widget, ready to sit on your reframed footage. Refine it in plain language and save it to your library.
Make your footage look broadcast-grade
Pick a template or build your own look, drop in your data, and export an overlay ready for your next edit.