How to Transcribe YouTube Videos for Free

A complete, repeatable workflow using Transcribe‑Videos.com to extract captions, clean the transcript, translate if needed, and export as TXT, SRT, VTT, or PDF.

Why Use a Transcript?

Transcripts turn video into searchable text. That makes it easier to study, quote, repurpose content into blog posts and newsletters, and create captions (SRT/VTT) for accessibility.

  • Students: turn lectures into notes and flashcards
  • Creators: repurpose videos into articles and social posts
  • Researchers: search long interviews and cite quotes

If you want to generate a transcript right now, start here: Transcribe‑Videos.com.

What You Need Before You Start

  • A YouTube video URL
  • Captions enabled on the video (auto-captions usually work)
  • A goal: copy text, download subtitles, translate, or clean filler words

It also helps to know what you’re making next. A transcript used for subtitles needs timestamps. A transcript used for a blog post usually doesn’t.

Step-by-Step: How to Transcribe a YouTube Video

This is the exact workflow we recommend if you want a clean transcript you can actually reuse (not just raw captions).

Step 1: Paste the Video URL

Copy any YouTube link and paste it into the input on the homepage. It works with regular videos, shorts, live streams, and unlisted content.

If you’re using a playlist link, open the specific video first and copy that URL.

See how the tool works if you’re new to transcript extraction.

Step 2: Generate the Transcript

Click “Get Transcript”. If multiple caption tracks exist, select the language you want.

If you don’t see a transcript, the video may not have captions available.

Tip: if you need a quote with proof, keep timestamps so you can reference the exact moment in the video.

Step 3: Clean and Edit

Use the built‑in editor to make the text easier to read and reuse.

  • Remove timestamps for blog posts and notes
  • Keep timestamps for citations, research, and fact-checking
  • Delete intros, outros, and sponsored segments

For the cleanest results, skim the transcript once and fix obvious misheard words (names, acronyms, technical terms).

Step 4: Export

Export the transcript based on what you’re doing next:

  • TXT: study notes, summaries, AI tools, quotes
  • PDF: printing and sharing
  • SRT/VTT: subtitles for YouTube uploads, editors, accessibility

Copy to clipboard for quick pasting into Docs, Notion, or your editor.

Which Format Should You Use?

Choosing the right export format saves time later. Here’s a simple way to decide:

  • Choose TXT if you want to summarize, write notes, extract quotes, or use AI tools.
  • Choose PDF if you want a shareable document (clients, teachers, teammates).
  • Choose SRT if you’re adding subtitles in most video editors.
  • Choose VTT if you’re working with web players or platforms that prefer WebVTT.

If you’re not sure, start with TXT. It’s the easiest to edit and reuse.

Transcript Cleaning Checklist (Make It Readable)

Auto-captions are usually good, but “good captions” are not always “good text”. Use this checklist to turn captions into a clean transcript:

  • Fix names, brands, acronyms, and technical terms
  • Remove filler words and repeated phrases
  • Break long paragraphs into smaller blocks
  • Add headings for major topic changes
  • Remove “like/um/you know” if you’ll publish the transcript
  • Keep timestamps if you’ll cite or subtitle

Goal: make it scannable. Readers should understand the structure within 10 seconds.

3 High-Value Workflows (Rankable Use Cases)

These are common reasons people search for “how to transcribe YouTube videos” — use the workflow that matches your goal.

Workflow A: Students (Transcript → Study Notes)

  • Extract transcript as TXT
  • Remove timestamps and filler words
  • Add headings for each topic
  • Turn each heading into 3–6 bullet points

Tip: link directly to the “Features” section for editing tools: Transcript features.

Workflow B: Creators (Transcript → Blog Post)

  • Extract transcript as TXT
  • Delete intros/outros/sponsor segments
  • Highlight 5–8 key points
  • Write a new article structure; do not publish raw transcript

This keeps your content original and more likely to rank.

Workflow C: Researchers (Transcript → Quotes with Evidence)

  • Keep timestamps
  • Search within transcript for keywords
  • Copy quotes with timestamps
  • Verify quotes by jumping to that moment in the video

Copy/Paste Templates (Add Real Value)

Template 1: Study Notes

Topic: [Video topic]

Main idea: [One sentence]

Key points:

  • [Point 1] — [Explanation]
  • [Point 2] — [Explanation]
  • [Point 3] — [Explanation]

Important terms: [Term] — [Definition]

Questions to review: [Question 1], [Question 2]

Template 2: Blog Post Outline

  • H1: [Clear benefit-driven title]
  • Intro: who it’s for + what they’ll learn
  • Section 1: problem / context
  • Section 2: steps / framework
  • Section 3: examples / mistakes
  • FAQ: 4–6 questions
  • Conclusion: summary + next step

If you want more guides, see the blog home: Blog.

Bonus: Translate and Summarize

If you need a transcript in another language, translate it first and then export. For long videos, a summary is often more useful than raw text.

  • Summaries for fast understanding
  • Key points for presentations
  • Study notes for revision
  • Quizzes for practice

Troubleshooting (Quick Fixes)

No transcript appears

  • Try another video: some videos have captions disabled
  • Try a different language track if available
  • For very new uploads, captions may not be generated yet

The transcript has mistakes

  • Auto-captions are not perfect; fix proper nouns and technical words
  • Consider keeping timestamps so you can jump to the exact spot

The transcript is one big block

  • Add headings every time the topic changes
  • Split paragraphs every 2–4 sentences
  • Convert lists (tools, steps, tips) into bullet points

FAQ

Is it legal to download transcripts?

Transcripts come from the video’s caption track. Make sure you have the right to reuse content, especially for commercial publishing. When in doubt, ask permission or summarize in your own words.

Will publishing a raw transcript rank?

Usually not. Search engines prefer original structure and insights. Use the transcript as source material, then write a new article with headings, examples, and a clear “why/what/how”.

How long should a blog post be for AdSense and SEO?

There’s no fixed number, but more useful content tends to perform better. Aim for thorough guides, clear navigation, and helpful sections (FAQ, troubleshooting, examples).

Can I use this for Shorts or live streams?

Yes, if captions are available for that content.

What format should I use for subtitles?

Use SRT or VTT. Most editors accept SRT; web players commonly support VTT.

How do I contact you?

Use the contact page: Contact. You can also review our Privacy Policy and Terms.

Next Step

Ready to try it? Go to the homepage and paste a URL:

Transcribe‑Videos.com – Get Transcript