SRT → VTT
Convert SRT to VTT
Free online SRT to VTT subtitle converter. Transform SubRip Subtitle (.srt) files to WebVTT (.vtt) format instantly in your browser. No upload required.
Format Comparison
| SRT | VTT | |
|---|---|---|
| Full Name | SubRip Subtitle | WebVTT |
| Extension | .srt | .vtt |
| Category | text | text |
| Key Features | Sequential numbering, Millisecond timestamps, Basic HTML formatting, Universal player support | CSS styling support, Cue positioning, Region definitions, HTML5 native support |
| Common Uses | YouTube uploads, Media players (VLC, MPC), Video editing, Streaming platforms | HTML5 video, Web streaming, HLS/DASH manifests, Browser-based players |
| Limitations | No styling metadata, No positioning, No font specification | Limited legacy player support, More complex than SRT, Browser rendering varies |
How to Convert SRT to VTT
- 1
Open the subtitle converter
Go to the Subtitle Tool and select your source SRT file by pasting the text or uploading the .srt file.
- 2
Set your framerate
Choose the framerate that matches your video (e.g., 23.976, 25, 29.97). This ensures frame-accurate timestamp conversion.
- 3
Select VTT as output format
Choose WebVTT (.vtt) from the output format dropdown.
- 4
Download your converted file
Click the download button to save your converted VTT file. You can also copy the output text directly.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I convert SRT to VTT?
Upload or paste your SubRip Subtitle (.srt) file into the converter, select VTT as the output format, and click Convert. The tool processes everything in your browser — no file uploads to a server.
What is the difference between SRT and VTT?
SRT is srt (subrip subtitle) is the most widely used subtitle format. VTT is webvtt (web video text tracks) is the w3c standard for displaying timed text in html5 video. They differ in features like sequential numbering (SRT) versus css styling support (VTT).
Is the SRT to VTT converter free?
Yes, completely free with no limits. The converter runs entirely in your browser using the timecodes library — no server processing, no sign-up, no watermarks.