Convert FLV to Word

Convert your FLV video to professionally formatted Word documents. Perfect for preserving content from the Flash era in searchable, editable text format.

Free to start — no credit card required.See pricing

Editable DOCX
5-min turnaround
Word compatible
FLV conversion guide

Convert FLV to DOCX in 6 steps

  1. 1
    Create account~30 sec

    Sign up for a free Sonix trial with 30 free minutes.

  2. 2
    Upload file~1 min

    Upload your FLV file from your computer or cloud storage.

    44+ formats supported
  3. 3
    Select language~10 sec

    Select the language spoken in your file.

    54+ languages
  4. 4
    Auto-transcribe~5 min

    Sonix AI transcribes your FLV audio automatically.

  5. 5
    Edit transcript~2 min

    Polish your transcript before exporting to Word.

  6. 6
    Export DOCX~10 sec

    Download your FLV transcript as a Word document.

    30+ export formats
The FLV file format

Understanding FLV files

What is a FLV file?

Legacy Flash video format for web streaming

FLV files are also known as Flash Video Files. Most FLV files use Adobe Flash Player or Adobe Air to transmit audio/video over the Internet. Most embedded videos on the Internet are FLV files, but with the introduction of HTML5 videos, many streaming services have dropped usage of FLV files. You can sometimes see FLV files with a F4V file extension. FLV files aren’t as common now, but we still support them at Sonix.

Common uses for FLV files

  • Legacy web videos
  • Archived Flash content
  • Old streaming platforms
  • Legacy YouTube downloads
  • Archived web content
  • Old streaming sites

Who works with FLV files?

Digital archivists, e-learning teams, and media librarians maintaining Flash-era video libraries still work with FLV files, often while migrating old training courses, webinars, and news clips to modern formats. Researchers and journalists reviewing pre-2015 web footage also encounter FLV files in their source material.

FLV vs MP4: which should you use?

FLV is a legacy container tied to Adobe Flash Player, while MP4 is an open ISO standard supported natively by browsers, phones, and editing software. FLV files often use older codecs such as Sorenson Spark or On2 VP6, whereas MP4 typically pairs H.264 video with AAC audio. Choose MP4 for anything you plan to play, share, or edit today; FLV is mainly relevant when handling archived Flash-era content.

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FLV conversion FAQ

FLV to DOCX: frequently asked questions

How do I convert an old FLV video to Word?

Upload your FLV to Sonix, our AI transcribes the audio track, then export to DOCX format with speaker labels, timestamps, and professional formatting.

Can I include timestamps from my FLV in Word?

Yes! Enable timestamps when exporting to DOCX. Reference specific moments in your archived video from the transcript document.

How are speakers shown in FLV Word documents?

Each speaker gets labeled paragraphs. Customize speaker names before export for clear attribution in archived interviews, podcasts, and multi-person content.

Can I preserve FLV content in Word format?

Absolutely! Create Word transcripts of your FLV archives. The text preserves spoken content in a searchable format even if video playback becomes impossible.

Is the FLV-to-Word transcript searchable?

Yes! Unlike video files (especially obsolete FLV), your Word document is fully text-searchable. Find any word or phrase from your Flash-era content instantly.

Can I batch convert multiple FLV files to Word?

Yes! Upload multiple FLV files to Sonix's batch processor. Transcribe entire legacy archives efficiently, then export each as a Word document.

Why won't my FLV file play on my computer?

FLV was designed for Adobe Flash Player, which was discontinued at the end of 2020, so modern browsers and many media players no longer support it. Players such as VLC can still open FLV files, or you can convert them to MP4 for broader compatibility.

Do I need to convert FLV to MP4 before transcribing?

No, FLV files can be uploaded directly for transcription. Converting to MP4 is only needed if you also want the video to play in modern browsers or editing software.

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