Convert MPGA to SRT

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

Free to start — no credit card required.See pricing

Timestamped
5-min turnaround
All platforms
MPGA conversion guide

Convert MPGA 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 MPGA 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 MPGA audio.

  5. 5
    Edit subtitles~2 min

    Fine-tune subtitle timing and text in the editor.

  6. 6
    Export SRT~10 sec

    Download your MPGA subtitles as an SRT file.

    30+ export formats
The MPGA file format

Understanding MPGA files

What is a MPGA file?

MPEG audio stream, similar to MP3

MPGA files, also known as MPEG-1 Layer 3 Audio files, are the audio tracks usually found embedded in MPEG-based videos and streaming files. Most MPGA files are encoded with the same compression algorithm as MP3 files. Thus, any media player that can handle MP3 files can also decode MPGA files. MPGA files are compressed audio filesand takes up less space when compared to WAV files. MPGA files are also commonly used in police investigations or for recording interviews. Since MPGA files are compressed, it is more difficult to tamper with the underlying audio because a user would have to decode the MPGA file to a more editable format and then re-encode the file, which would also inadvertently overwrite most of the file’s meta data. MPGA files are a widely accessible file format.

Common uses for MPGA files

  • Audio from video files
  • Interview recordings
  • Evidence preservation
  • Video demuxing
  • Recording devices
  • Legal/investigation recordings

Who works with MPGA files?

Video editors and post-production teams encounter MPGA files when separating the audio track from MPEG video projects, and digital archivists working with legacy broadcast material often manage audio in this format. Journalists and researchers handling older field recordings may also receive files with the .mpga extension from hardware recorders and media conversion tools.

MPGA vs MP3: which should you use?

MPGA and MP3 files usually contain the same MPEG-1 Audio Layer III data; the difference is largely the file extension convention rather than the encoding itself. The .mpga extension most often labels audio streams demuxed from MPEG video, while .mp3 is the standard extension for standalone audio files and enjoys near-universal player and device support. Choose MP3 when sharing files broadly, since some software does not recognize the .mpga extension even though it can decode the audio.

Convert MP3 to text
10x
Faster than real-time
Get your MPGA SRT in minutes
99%
Accuracy rate
Industry-leading AI for MPGA files
53+
Languages
Subtitles in any language
30+
Export formats
SRT, VTT, text, and more
MPGA conversion FAQ

MPGA to SRT: frequently asked questions

Can you convert MPGA to SRT subtitles?

Yes! Sonix transcribes your MPGA 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.

Why won't my MPGA file open in my media player?

Some players do not recognize the .mpga extension even though the audio inside is standard MPEG audio. Renaming the file with an .mp3 extension usually lets any MP3-capable player open it.

Is an MPGA file the same as an MP3?

In most cases the audio data is identical, since both typically use MPEG-1 Audio Layer III encoding. The .mpga extension simply appears more often on audio tracks extracted from MPEG video files.

Transcription software reviews

Trusted by video creators

4.98 rating from 211 reviews

99% accuracy. Every word matters.

AI transcription and translation in 54+ languages.

30 minutes free
No credit card
Cancel anytime