NovoNotes has released SnapClip, a free clipper plugin for macOS and Windows.
I use clippers a lot in my sound design work, and my go-to approach is to put one before the limiter every time. Taming the extreme peaks with a clipper first means the limiter has an easier job, and, to me, the result sounds more transparent with no pumping.
SnapClip is a clipper built around two things: clean processing through high-quality oversampling, and a graph-based interface that gives you direct control over the soft-knee curve rather than a single knob.
The plugin uses up to 16x oversampling combined with ADAA (Antiderivative Anti-Aliasing), a DSP technique that reduces aliasing distortion with less CPU overhead than brute-force high-rate oversampling. The result is up to 90% less CPU load compared to 256x oversampling, with equivalent noise reduction.
Another cool thing is that SnapClip uses a minimum-phase design with zero latency and no pre-ringing, which lets you insert it across many tracks without adding delay or smearing transients.
The workflow is pretty simple. You raise the input gain to shave hard peaks, with hard clipping shown in red on the waveform display. You then shape the soft-knee curve directly on the graph, with soft clipping shown in yellow. This visual feedback makes it clear how much of each type of clipping is happening.
Snap Adjust speeds up setup. You specify a peak history window and a target gain reduction value, and the plugin back-calculates Input Gain, Saturation, and Threshold in one step.
In this age of AI-everything, I should point out that this is a deterministic math calculation, not AI or machine learning. The same input always returns the same result. It handles the mechanical part of getting started and leaves the actual sound shaping to you.
The phase-compensated Dry/Wet mix is also pretty useful. Blending a clipped signal with the dry signal naively can cause comb filtering, which SnapClip avoids through phase compensation in the mix path.
By the way, a Pro version of the plugin is in development at a planned price of $59. It will add linear phase mode, True Peak ceiling, up to 256x oversampling for offline rendering, and a wider range of clipping algorithms.
The standard edition covers tracks, buses, and pre-compressor use well, while Pro will be better suited to mastering and multi-mic setups.
SnapClip is free to download until May 31, 2026. Licenses obtained during the campaign are perpetual with no feature limits. After May 31, new licenses will be priced at $19. No credit card is required.
SnapClip is available in VST3, AU, and AAX formats for macOS 11 and above (Apple Silicon native), and VST3 for Windows 11.
Download: SnapClip (FREE until May 31)
Deal of the day 🔥: Get 59% OFF Roland ZENOLOGY PRO!More:
- Analog Obsession releases RazorClip, a FREE analog-based clipper plugin
- Voidstar Audio releases KLYP, a free soft clipper plugin
Last Updated on May 6, 2026 by Tomislav Zlatic.





