You just got home from a track day. Your GoPro or Insta360 captured everything — the braking points, the apexes, the moment you finally nailed turn 9. Now you want to turn that raw footage into something worth sharing: speed overlays, a route map, maybe a lap timer ticking in the corner.

Sounds simple. It isn't — unless you pick the right tool. We tested every major GPS overlay software available in 2026 so you don't have to waste a weekend figuring out why your data won't sync.

The Contenders

SnapPix ⚡ Our Pick
$3.99 / month Windows (Mac coming soon) 30-day free trial
★★★★★Ease of use
★★★★Features
★★★★★Value

SnapPix is built from scratch for one specific audience: action sports creators who want polished, data-rich videos without learning a professional editing suite. Drop in your GoPro, Insta360, or phone clips, trim them on the timeline, pick your visual style, and export. That's genuinely it.

What sets it apart is its privacy-first architecture — everything runs locally on your machine. No cloud upload, no tracking, no subscription to a server that might disappear. Your footage and GPS data never leave your computer.

At $3.99/month with a 30-day free trial and no credit card required, the barrier to entry is essentially zero. The interface is purpose-built: no Fusion page, no node graph, no color wheels you'll never touch.

What we love

  • Dead simple — no editing background needed
  • Local processing, full privacy
  • Speed, route maps, HUD overlays built in
  • Built for GoPro, Insta360, phone clips
  • $3.99/mo — almost no barrier to try
  • Works offline, no cloud dependency

Watch out for

  • Windows only for now (Mac coming soon)
  • New product — smaller community
  • Less advanced than RaceRender for pro motorsport
Telemetry Overlay
~$30 one-time Windows & Mac
★★★★★Ease of use
★★★★★Features
★★★★Value

Telemetry Overlay is arguably SnapPix's most serious competition. It's cross-platform, actively maintained, and supports an impressive range of cameras and data formats — GoPro, DJI, Insta360, Garmin, GPX, AIM, Alfano, and more.

The catch: it expects you to know what you're doing. Syncing external GPX files, configuring gauge layouts, dealing with format mismatches — there's a real learning curve. It rewards patience, but casual creators will hit walls that SnapPix simply doesn't have.

What we love

  • Cross-platform (Win & Mac)
  • Huge data format compatibility
  • One-time purchase
  • Active development

Watch out for

  • Steep learning curve
  • UI feels technical, not consumer-friendly
  • Manual data syncing often required
RaceRender 3
Paid (premium) Windows & Mac
★★★★★Ease of use
★★★★★Features
★★★★★Value

RaceRender is the veteran — powerful and fully-featured for serious motorsport content. Multi-camera PiP, 360° support, multiple data loggers, lap timing, g-force charts. For professional-grade motorsport analysis, it has what you need.

For everyone else? It's overkill. The interface is dated, the learning curve is steep, and the free version adds a watermark. For a track day hobbyist who just wants a clean speedometer, it's a sledgehammer where you need a scalpel.

What we love

  • Unmatched depth for pro motorsport
  • Multi-cam PiP and 360° support
  • Wide data logger compatibility

Watch out for

  • High learning curve
  • Dated UI design
  • Watermark in free tier
  • Overkill for casual creators
Garmin VIRB Edit
Free Windows & Mac Abandoned
★★★★★Ease of use
★★★★★Features
★★★★★Value

Once the go-to free option. Today it's a ghost — no updates, compatibility issues on modern OS versions, and a UX frozen in 2015. Using it in 2026 means accepting crashes and workarounds. It's free in the worst sense: it costs you your time.

What we love

  • Free
  • Works with non-Garmin cameras via GPX

Watch out for

  • No longer maintained
  • Clunky and crash-prone
  • Dead community, no support
GoPro Quik
Free / subscription Mobile + Desktop
★★★★★Ease of use
★★★★★Features
★★★★★Value

Quik is slick, mobile-first, and great for throwing together a quick highlight reel. But as a GPS overlay tool it's shallow — limited options, minimal customization, cloud-dependent, and GoPro cameras only.

What we love

  • Easiest to use in the field
  • Great for quick social highlights

Watch out for

  • GoPro cameras only
  • Very limited GPS overlay options
  • Cloud-dependent
GoPro ReFrame + DaVinci
Free plugin Win & Mac Beta
★★★★Ease of use
★★★★360° reframing
★★★★★Value

Let's clear up a misconception: the GoPro ReFrame plugin is not a GPS overlay tool. It's a 360° reframing tool — great for controlling perspective on MAX footage, useless for speed gauges and route maps.

Even for its intended purpose, forum users report confusing controls, unexpected behavior between timeline and Fusion, and essentially no documentation. You also need to already know DaVinci Resolve — a months-long learning curve on its own.

"I have just downloaded the new GoPro ReFrame plugin… when I drop it onto a clip I only get one view. Are there any instructions anywhere?"

— Blackmagic Design community forum, 2025

What we love

  • Free (if you use DaVinci)
  • Excellent 360° reframing control

Watch out for

  • Not a GPS overlay tool at all
  • Still in beta — buggy
  • Requires DaVinci Resolve knowledge
  • GoPro cameras only

Side-by-Side

Tool GPS Overlays Ease of Use Price Private / Local Mac Maintained
SnapPix ✓ Yes ★★★★★ $3.99/mo ✓ Yes Soon
Telemetry Overlay ✓ Yes ★★★ ~$30 once ✓ Yes
RaceRender 3 ✓ Yes ★★ Paid ✓ Yes
Garmin VIRB Edit ✓ Yes ★★ Free ✓ Yes
GoPro Quik Limited ★★★★★ Subscription ✗ Cloud
ReFrame + DaVinci ✗ No Free* ✓ Yes Beta

The Verdict

If you're a serious motorsport data nerd running AiM loggers and six camera angles, RaceRender or Telemetry Overlay will serve you better. They're built for that depth.

For the vast majority of action sports creators — the track day driver, the moto vlogger, the cyclist — SnapPix is the only tool in this field that prioritizes your time as much as your output. Purpose-built, privacy-respecting, priced for hobbyists, and genuinely fast to use.

At $3.99/month with a 30-day free trial, the question isn't really whether to try it — it's why you'd try anything else first.

Try SnapPix free for 30 days →