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    How to Auto-Zoom a Screen Recording to Follow Your Cursor

    Make your product demos look professionally edited. Learn how to apply automatic zoom effects to track your mouse cursor natively on Mac.

    19 de mayo de 2026·2 min read

    Table of Contents

    • How to Auto-Zoom a Screen Recording to Follow Your Cursor
    • The Post-Production Method (Manual)
    • The Automated Way: Native Project Importers

    How to Auto-Zoom a Screen Recording to Follow Your Cursor

    When recording a full-screen screencast on a high-resolution display, viewers often struggle to see what you are doing. The mouse pointer is tiny, and buttons or menu items are hard to read on mobile devices or smaller screens.

    To solve this, professional video editors manually add zoom keyframes in post-production, panning to follow the cursor. While the result looks great, doing this manually in tools like Final Cut Pro or Premiere Pro can take hours.

    Here is how to automate cursor zoom effects on macOS.

    💡

    The ScreenKite Zoom: ScreenKite tracks your mouse cursor and applies smooth, automatic zooms to the active area in real time. Customize zoom levels, padding, and transitions instantly—completely free during beta. Download ScreenKite for Mac →


    The Post-Production Method (Manual)

    If you are using standard editing software, you must manually program your zooms:

    1. Import your screen recording into your editor.
    2. Navigate to the timeline where the interaction occurs.
    3. Add a scale and position keyframe right before the mouse clicks.
    4. Move forward a few frames, and increase the scale (e.g., to 150%) and adjust the X/Y coordinates to focus on the cursor.
    5. Add another keyframe to zoom back out.

    Repeating this for a 3-minute video can require configuring dozens of keyframes.


    The Automated Way: Native Project Importers

    Modern recording tools handle cursor tracking programmatically. Because the operating system knows exactly where your cursor is during recording, native apps can record the coordinate data as metadata.

    With ScreenKite, this metadata is used to apply automatic, smooth zooms. You do not have to program anything—the software dynamically zooms in on your clicks and cursor movements, saving you hours of post-production editing.

    Table of Contents

    • How to Auto-Zoom a Screen Recording to Follow Your Cursor
    • The Post-Production Method (Manual)
    • The Automated Way: Native Project Importers
    #auto-zoom#cursor#editing#macos#tutorials
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    ScreenKite Team

    El equipo detrás de ScreenKite — creando el grabador de pantalla más rápido para macOS.

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