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How to blur the background of a video on Mac

Get a portrait-mode look in your videos: blur your real room behind you, live while recording or on imported footage — no manual masking.

Background blur is the most-wanted video effect for a simple reason: it makes any room look intentional. The bookshelf chaos, the kitchen behind you, the radiator — all of it melts into a soft, professional backdrop while you stay sharp. Phones do this for photos automatically; here’s how to get it for video on a Mac.

The fast way: blur as a background type

Background Eraser treats blur as one of its background fills. The AI separates you from the room, then re-renders the room defocused behind your sharp cutout:

  1. Install Background Eraser (free, Mac App Store, macOS 15.4+).
  2. Pick Blur as the background type.
  3. Record — the blur is live in the preview — or import an existing clip of a person.
  4. Export as MP4 up to 1080p.

Because the same separation powers every fill, you can flip between the blurred room and a full replacement (color, image, looping video) and pick whichever reads better — without re-recording.

Why the “fake bokeh” look fails, and how to avoid it

Cheap blur effects look wrong because of three giveaways:

  • A hard halo where the blur bleeds into your hair or shoulders. Fix: feather and tightness controls pull the edge in until the transition is invisible — Background Eraser exposes both as sliders.
  • Edge flicker in motion: the mask is recomputed per frame, and a blur boundary that jumps frame-to-frame screams “filter.” Fix: temporal smoothing, which stabilizes the matte across frames.
  • Too much blur. Real lenses at f/1.8 don’t obliterate the room into fog. A moderate blur that leaves shapes recognizable looks like depth of field; maximum blur looks like a privacy filter.

Other ways to do it

Final Cut Pro can combine its Scene Removal Mask with a gaussian blur on a duplicated layer — it works, but it’s a manual compositing setup and only happens in post. Zoom/Teams blur exists only inside calls and their meeting-grade compression isn’t publishable. Online tools can apply blur server-side, with the usual trade: uploading your footage and waiting on a queue, with free tiers capped on length and resolution.

For recording yourself with a blurred background — the talking-head use case — doing it live on-device is the only approach where you see the final result before you’ve spent the take.

Frequently asked questions

Can I blur a video background without editing skills?
Yes — AI does the separation automatically. You pick Blur as the background type and the app keeps you sharp while defocusing the room. No masks, keyframes or rotoscoping.
Why blur instead of replacing the background?
Blur keeps your video authentic — it's recognizably your space, just cleaner. It hides mess and distractions while avoiding the artificial look replacement backgrounds can have, which is why it's the default style for professional talking-head video.
Does blurring the background work live while recording?
In Background Eraser, yes. The blur is rendered in the live preview as you record, so you see the final result while filming.

Try Background Eraser free

Free on the Mac App Store, with a companion iPhone app. Every feature included — exports carry a small watermark until you go Pro.

Mac: macOS 15.4+ · iPhone: iOS 17+ · No account · Works offline