Hardcode Urdu subtitles into video

Permanently embed Urdu subtitles directly into your video pixels. Burned-in captions display on any device or platform—perfect for Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, and social media.

Free to start — no credit card required.See pricing

Permanent display
Custom styling
Social media ready
Urdu transcription guide

Hardcode Urdu subtitles in 5 steps

  1. 1
    1. Upload video~1 min

    Upload your video file from your computer, Dropbox, or Google Drive.

    50+ formats supported
  2. 2
    2. Generate subtitles~5 min

    Sonix AI transcribes your Urdu video and generates subtitles automatically.

    Word-level timestamps
  3. 3
    3. Edit transcript~2 min

    Correct errors and adjust subtitle timing in the browser-based editor.

  4. 4
    4. Choose style~1 min

    Customize subtitle font, size, color, background, and position with a live preview before rendering.

  5. 5
    5. Render video~5 min

    Sonix burns your Urdu subtitles directly into the video pixels.

The Urdu language

Understanding Urdu transcription

Who transcribes Urdu content?

Urdu is the national language of Pakistan, so its broadcasters, news channels, and government and legal offices generate large volumes of Urdu audio, alongside Urdu-medium media in Indian cities such as Hyderabad, Delhi, and Lucknow. Journalists, academic researchers, oral historians, NGOs, and diaspora media outlets in the UK, US, and Gulf states also transcribe Urdu interviews, podcasts, and broadcast archives.

Urdu dialects and accents

Standard Urdu is based on the Delhi (Khari Boli) variety, while Dakhini Urdu is spoken across the Deccan region of southern India, including Hyderabad. Because most Pakistanis speak Urdu as a second language, accents are shaped by first languages such as Punjabi, Sindhi, Pashto, and Saraiki — useful context when transcribing interviews recorded across different regions.

Where Urdu is spoken

Urdu is spoken in Pakistan and India (Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Delhi, Jharkhand, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal).

10 min
Average processing
Rendering time varies by video length
100%
Display reliability
Subtitles visible on every device
MP4
Output format
Universal video format
15+
Style options
Fonts, colors, and positions
Urdu transcription FAQ

Frequently asked questions about
Urdu burn-in subtitles

What's the difference between burn-in and soft subtitles?

Burn-in (hardcoded) subtitles are permanently embedded in the video pixels and cannot be turned off. Soft subtitles (SRT/VTT) are separate files that viewers can toggle on/off. Burn-in is ideal for social media where caption support is inconsistent.

Can I customize the subtitle appearance?

Yes! Sonix offers extensive styling options including font family, size, color, background color, opacity, and position (top, middle, bottom). Preview your style in real-time before rendering.

Will burn-in subtitles reduce video quality?

Sonix preserves your original video quality during the burn-in process. We use high-quality rendering to ensure subtitles look crisp and professional without degrading your footage.

How long does burn-in processing take?

Processing time depends on video length and resolution. A typical 10-minute 1080p video takes about 5-10 minutes to render. You'll receive an email notification when your video is ready.

What video format does burn-in export?

Sonix exports burned-in videos as MP4 files with H.264 encoding—the most universally compatible video format. Your video will play on virtually any device or platform.

Can I edit subtitles after burn-in?

No. Once subtitles are burned in, they're permanent. We recommend thoroughly reviewing and editing your transcript in the Sonix editor before rendering. You can always create a new burn-in version if needed.

Can Sonix transcribe Urdu audio and video files?

Yes. Upload your Urdu audio or video file, let Sonix transcribe it automatically, then review and edit the transcript in the browser-based editor before exporting.

Should I choose Urdu or Hindi for my recording?

Spoken colloquial Urdu and Hindi are largely mutually intelligible, so the practical difference is the output script. Choose Urdu for a Perso-Arabic script transcript and Hindi for Devanagari.

Does Urdu transcription handle Pakistani and Indian accents?

Urdu is spoken with regional accents across Pakistan and India, including Dakhini in the south. Sonix transcribes standard spoken Urdu, and the synchronized editor makes it straightforward to review and correct accent-heavy passages.

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