Convert M2V to SRT

Sonix transcribes your M2V file and exports it as SRT subtitles that you can use with any video platform or editor.

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5-min turnaround
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M2V conversion guide

Convert M2V to SRT 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 M2V 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 and timestamps your M2V audio.

  5. 5
    Edit subtitles~2 min

    Fine-tune subtitle timing and text in the editor.

  6. 6
    Export SRT~10 sec

    Download your M2V subtitles as an SRT file.

    30+ export formats
The M2V file format

Understanding M2V files

What is a M2V file?

MPEG-2 video-only stream for DVD authoring

M2V files are usually raw video files and thus, will not have any audio to be transcribed. They are normally designed to be multiplexed (also known as ‘muxed’) where audio data and other streams (including subtitles) are added before authoring (creation of a master or a DVD master). Thus, while you won’t be transcribing M2V files directly, you can easily transcribe with Sonix the audio stream that you will mux with the M2V file to create fast, accurate subtitle SRT files.
M2V files are usually an extracted video-only version of a MPEG-2 file, but they can also sometimes contain audio files. They are also commonly seen with M2As, AIFs or WAV audio files before authoring.

Common uses for M2V files

  • DVD authoring
  • Broadcast video
  • Video multiplexing
  • DVD authoring software
  • Broadcast video editors
  • Video encoding workflows

Who works with M2V files?

Post-production editors and disc-authoring engineers work with M2V streams when preparing video masters for DVDs, and archivists digitizing legacy DVD or broadcast material frequently encounter them. Subtitling and localization teams also handle M2V files alongside their separate audio tracks during the authoring stage.

M2V vs MPG: which should you use?

An M2V file holds only the MPEG-2 video elementary stream, while an MPG file is a multiplexed program stream that packages video and audio together in one playable file. M2V fits DVD-authoring and encoding workflows where the audio is kept as a separate file until the final mux, whereas MPG suits general playback and distribution. For transcription, an MPG file can be uploaded directly, but an M2V typically contains no audio to transcribe.

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M2V conversion FAQ

M2V to SRT: frequently asked questions

Can you convert M2V to SRT subtitles?

Yes! Sonix transcribes your M2V file with precise timestamps and exports it as SRT subtitles ready for any video platform.

What is an SRT file?

SRT (SubRip Subtitle) is the most widely supported subtitle format. It works with YouTube, Vimeo, Facebook, and all major video editors.

How accurate are the timestamps?

Sonix generates word-level timestamps accurate to the hundredth of a second, ensuring your subtitles sync perfectly with the audio.

Can I edit the SRT timing?

Yes! Our editor lets you adjust subtitle timing, merge or split captions, and customize character limits per line.

Does it work with YouTube?

Absolutely! Upload your SRT file to YouTube Studio and your subtitles will sync automatically with your video.

Can I set characters per line?

Yes! Customize your SRT with options for max characters per line, lines per caption, and maximum duration.

Can I convert M2V files to text?

Usually not directly, because most M2V files are video-only and contain no audio track. Upload the matching audio file — often a WAV, AIFF, or M2A saved alongside the M2V — then transcribe, edit, and export the text.

Why doesn't my M2V file have any sound?

M2V is an MPEG-2 video elementary stream, so the audio is stored in a separate file until the two are multiplexed during DVD or broadcast authoring. Look for a companion audio file with the same name to find the sound.

How do I create subtitles for an M2V video?

Transcribe the separate audio track that accompanies the M2V: upload the audio, review the transcript in the editor, and export it as an SRT or VTT subtitle file to mux with the video.

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