How to move Final Cut Pro projects from Mac to iPad

By Andrew O'Hara

If you use Final Cut Pro on your iPad, you may know you can't migrate a library from your Mac to your tablet. Turns out there is a way to do it, but it's not obvious.

Adjusting color on Final Cut Pro for iPad

Final Cut Pro

for iPad has launched with the omission of one major feature -- round-tripping. This is where a project can move seamlessly from one device to another, and back again.

Think about starting a video project on your Mac before moving it to your iPad Pro while on the road. Then getting it back to your Mac when you return to your editing suite.

At least at launch, this isn't possible with Final Cut Pro for iPad.

Chris Hocking, co-founder of Late Night Films who creates various apps for filmmakers, has discovered how to move a project from your Mac to your iPad. Unfortunately, the process is rather tedious.

Final Cut Pro project bundle extension on Mac

As Hocking explains, Apple uses .fcpbundle for Final Cut Projects on the Mac, but a .fcpproj bundle on the iPad. That .fcpproj bundle holds the .fcpbundle file within it.

How to move a Final Cut Pro project from iPad to Mac and back

How to start a Final Cut Pro project and open it on iPad

Starting a project on your Mac and moving to iPad is more complicated. You have to fabricate the folder structure yourself with additional files.

Creating the folder structure for Final Cut Pro for iPad on Mac

Hocking says you have to make your own http://com.apple.VAProjectInfo metadata file that will sit within the encompassing project folder. To do this, copy it from an existing project, edit it in a text editor, and replace the project name.

Lastly, you need to create a thumbnail file that gets displayed on the launch screen. Assuming you have these files and the correct folder structure, you can AirDrop the file to your iPad.

Limitations and surprises

Support for Mac projects is surprisingly robust as most Mac-specific content works on the tablet-based app.

All projects within an event will appear on iPad. Most text effects, transitions, and multi-cam clips all show up too.

Some features, like color boards, will show but aren't editable on iPad. Select Motion templates and third-party effects are broken, too, in their current state.

This proves that moving between devices is possible and that Apple may be working on official round-tripping support in the future.

Third-party plugins, while not available now, are touted as coming soon and will further expand its abilities. Despite a limiting launch, the future of Final Cut Pro on iPad looks promising.