How to Download Subtitles From YouTube (SRT & VTT Explained)
28 avril 2026
Subtitles are quietly one of the most useful things you can extract from a video: searchable text of everything said, timestamps included. Students pull them from lectures, editors use them for rough cuts, translators start from them, and researchers quote from them without scrubbing through hours of footage.
Getting the file
- Paste the video link into a subtitles downloader.
- Pick a language — videos often carry manual captions in one or two languages plus auto-generated ones in dozens.
- Choose SRT or VTT and download. You get a small text file, not a video.
SRT vs VTT in one minute
SRT is the older, plainer format: numbered blocks of start time, end time, text. Every video player, editor and tool on earth reads it — VLC, Premiere, YouTube itself on re-upload. If in doubt, pick SRT.
VTT (WebVTT) is the web-native evolution: same idea, plus support for styling and positioning. It's what HTML5 video players use natively. Pick VTT if the destination is a website; pick SRT for everything else. The two convert between each other losslessly for ordinary captions.
Manual vs auto-generated captions
Manual captions were written or reviewed by a human — accurate punctuation, correct names, proper sentence breaks. Auto-generated captions are machine transcription: very usable for finding what was said and roughly when, but expect missing punctuation and mangled proper nouns. Tools mark auto captions as "(auto)" in the language list so you know which you're getting.
What to do with a subtitle file
- Watch with subtitles offline: name the .srt the same as the video file and put it in the same folder — VLC picks it up automatically.
- Search a lecture: open the SRT in any text editor and Ctrl+F the phrase; the timestamp above it tells you where to seek.
- Translate: subtitle files are the standard input for translation workflows — one small text file instead of a video upload.
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