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Dance Video Analyzer

Dance video analyzer. Upload your dance and AI grades it like a choreographer, scoring musicality, lines, control and energy by style, with the one fix that lifts your performance most.

Choose the type of analysis you want to perform on your video.

Only models with video understanding are shown. Access depends on your subscription tier.

Supports YouTube, Vimeo, and direct video file URLs. YouTube links work best with Gemini.

What is Dance Video Analyzer?

Dance Video Analyzer is an AI tool that grades your dance from a video the way a choreographer would, breaking the performance into components and pointing out exactly what to fix. You upload a clip of yourself dancing and the AI reads your musicality, technique and body lines, control, sharpness, footwork, energy, transitions, and use of space, then scores the whole thing out of 100. If the style is visible (hip-hop, contemporary, ballet, jazz, a K-pop cover) it identifies it and grades against that style's standards, because clean lines mean something different in ballet than in hip-hop. Most dancers can feel when a run is off but can't see why, because you're inside the movement and the mirror only shows you the front. Filming yourself helps, but you still need a trained eye to know whether you look flat because of timing, soft lines, or under-commitment. This tool gives you that read on demand. It detects the common issues (off-beat timing, sloppy lines, lack of control, low energy, telegraphed transitions) and then does the most useful thing a coach does: it names the one fix that lifts the whole performance most instead of listing everything at once.

How Dance Video Analyzer Works

Upload a video of your dance, ideally with your whole body in frame, decent light, and the music audible so the AI can judge your timing. The AI tracks your movement through the performance and compares it against the standards of the style it detects. It reads your musicality to see whether you're hitting on the beat and catching the accents, then judges your technique and body lines for cleanliness and extension. It watches your control on turns, holds and landings, your sharpness and dynamics (the contrast between hitting and flowing), and your footwork for precision and speed. It reads your performance energy and facial commitment, your transitions between sections, and how you use levels and space. From all of this it names specific issues and rates how severe each one is. Then it isolates the single highest-leverage fix, explains why it's the root cause, and prescribes a couple of targeted drills with the feel you're going for. Adding notes about the style, the song, your level, and what you're working on makes the read sharper and more personal.

Benefits of Dance Video Analyzer

  • Get a choreographer-style read on your dancing in seconds without waiting for class feedback or a private session.
  • See a component-by-component breakdown of musicality, lines, control, sharpness, footwork, energy and transitions so you know what's actually holding the performance back.
  • Find out whether your real problem is timing, technique or commitment instead of just feeling like the run was off.
  • Get the single priority fix rather than a confusing list, because performance issues usually cascade from one root cause you should address first.
  • Receive specific drills tied to your issue with the feel you're chasing, so practice time turns into real change.
  • Track progress by uploading a new run after working on the fix and comparing the new score and breakdown.
  • Get graded against the standards of your actual style, since clean technique looks different in ballet, hip-hop and contemporary.

Tips for Best Results

  • Film with your whole body in frame and the music audible, since the AI needs to hear the track to judge your timing.
  • Record in good light with a stable phone so the AI can read your lines and footwork clearly through the fast counts.
  • Add notes about the style, the song, your level, and what you're working on so the analysis targets your real goals.
  • Perform the run at full energy rather than marking it, because marking hides the timing and commitment issues you want to catch.
  • Work on only the one priority fix between sessions, since chasing every note at once stops the change from sticking.
  • Re-upload a fresh run after a week of drilling to see whether the priority issue improved and the score moved.
  • Try filming from the front and from a slight angle on separate uploads, because some line and spacing issues are easier to see from one view.

Popular Use Cases

  • Self-taught dancers learning a routine at home who have no instructor to give them honest feedback.
  • K-pop cover dancers checking whether they're matching the timing, sharpness and lines of the original choreography.
  • Students between classes confirming they're actually applying the correction their teacher gave them.
  • Dancers prepping a piece for an audition or a competition who want a structured read before they perform it.
  • Beginners learning what good musicality and clean lines look like with a jargon-light breakdown to work from.
  • Content creators reviewing a dance clip before posting to make sure the energy and timing land on camera.
  • Choreographers and small studios giving members a quick structured starting point between in-person notes.