Convert OGV to SRT

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

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Timestamped
5-min turnaround
All platforms
OGV conversion guide

Convert OGV 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 OGV 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 OGV audio.

  5. 5
    Edit subtitles~2 min

    Fine-tune subtitle timing and text in the editor.

  6. 6
    Export SRT~10 sec

    Download your OGV subtitles as an SRT file.

    30+ export formats
The OGV file format

Understanding OGV files

What is a OGV file?

Open-source video format for web HTML5 playback

OGV files are video files that use the Xiph.Org's open source Ogg container format; may contain video streams that use one or more different codecs, such as Theora. OGV files are primarily used to play webpage video content (usually within video tags within the HTML5 spec). Xiph.Org have a DirectShow codec pack that enables software developers and content creators to include support for OGV files in both open-source and commercial applications. OGV files are a binary stream media container format that combines several codecs of texts, subtitles, audio and video data. OGV files are not called OGG Vorbis files; ‘Vorbis’ is reserved for OGG files which are audio-only files that use the ‘Vorbis’ compression algorithm.

Common uses for OGV files

  • Web video embedding
  • Open-source video distribution
  • HTML5 video
  • Web video platforms
  • Wikipedia/Wikimedia
  • Open-source projects

Who works with OGV files?

Digital archivists, university media libraries, and open-education publishers rely on OGV when a fully royalty-free video format is a licensing requirement. Linux application developers and free-software communities also use it because the codecs ship without patent restrictions on open-source platforms.

OGV vs WEBM: which should you use?

Both OGV and WebM are royalty-free, open video formats built for HTML5 playback, but they package different codecs: OGV typically carries Theora video with Vorbis audio in an Ogg container, while WebM uses the newer VP8/VP9 codecs in a Matroska-based container. WebM generally achieves better quality at the same file size and enjoys broader browser and platform support today. OGV remains useful for archival material and older open-source projects, whereas WebM is the more practical choice for new web video.

Convert WEBM to text
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Get your OGV SRT in minutes
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53+
Languages
Subtitles in any language
30+
Export formats
SRT, VTT, text, and more
OGV conversion FAQ

OGV to SRT: frequently asked questions

Can you convert OGV to SRT subtitles?

Yes! Sonix transcribes your OGV 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.

Is an OGV file the same as an OGG file?

No. Both use the Ogg container from Xiph.Org, but OGV holds video (typically Theora), while the OGG extension is reserved for audio-only files encoded with Vorbis.

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

OGV relies on codecs like Theora and Vorbis that are not preinstalled on every operating system. Players such as VLC support it natively, or you can install Xiph.Org's codec components for other software.

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