WAV to SRT Subtitles
Upload a WAV file and get a properly timed .srt subtitle file in minutes.
Accepts a WAV audio file (and other audio/video formats) · returns a timestamped .srt subtitle file (plus VTT and TXT).
60 min free · no card required · we never train on your audio
How do I convert a WAV to SRT?
To convert WAV to SRT, upload the WAV file to Pepys and it transcribes the audio and generates a timestamped .srt subtitle file in minutes, in 99+ languages. You can also export VTT, TXT, Markdown, DOCX, PDF, or JSON. Your first 60 minutes are free, no card required.
How wav to srt works
Upload your WAV
Drop in the WAV file – we read the lossless audio directly, no conversion to lose quality.
AI transcribes and times it
Pepys transcribes the audio and builds subtitle cues with accurate start and end times.
Export your SRT
Tweak any line inline, then download a ready-to-use .srt file – or export VTT or TXT instead.
WAV is the uncompressed master most studios and recorders save, which makes it ideal source audio for clean subtitles. Upload the WAV and Pepys transcribes it, then splits the text into properly timed cues and hands you a finished .srt file you can drop into your video editor or player.
No software to install and no subscription. Your first 60 minutes are free, you pay only for what you transcribe, credits never expire, and we never train on your audio.
Clean paragraphs. No more um's and ah's.
The left is what Pepys hands back – logical paragraphs with the filler stripped out, punctuated and readable. The right is the raw, one-line-per-segment dump most transcribers leave you with.
um so yeah everyone keeps telling you to like lead with your best line right but uh honestly if you give away the whole answer in the first second you know there's basically no reason for anyone to keep watching so the hook isn't kind of the smartest thing you say it's like a loop you open that they need to close and um that's the part that actually keeps people around
RawReads lossless WAV directly for clean, accurate cues
Properly timed .srt with correct start and end timestamps
Also exports VTT, TXT, Markdown, DOCX, PDF, and JSON from the same transcript
99+ languages, auto-detected · we never train on your audio · credits never expire
Any language – 99+ detected automatically
- English
- 中文
- Español
- العربية
- हिन्दी
- Français
- 日本語
- Português
- Русский
- Deutsch
- 한국어
- Italiano
- বাংলা
- Türkçe
- فارسی
- Tiếng Việt
- தமிழ்
- Polski
- ไทย
- Українська
- Nederlands
- עברית
- Ελληνικά
- తెలుగు
- Bahasa Indonesia
- اردو
- Svenska
- मराठी
- Română
- Magyar
- Čeština
- ગુજરાતી
- Kiswahili
- ქართული
- Tagalog
- አማርኛ
Works with the platforms you live in.
Paste a link from YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Spotify, or Apple Podcasts – or drop in any audio or video file. We transcribe it once, then you export it however your workflow needs.
- YouTube
- TikTok
- Spotify
- Apple Podcasts
- or any file
Export to any format
- TXT
- Markdown
- DOCX
- SRT
- VTT
- JSON
Timestamps, speaker labels, and subtitle timing carry through to every export.
Wav to srt – questions, answered
How do I convert a WAV to SRT?
Upload your WAV file on this page – the first 60 minutes are free, no card. Pepys transcribes it and generates a timestamped .srt subtitle file you can edit and download in minutes.
Are the subtitle timings accurate?
Yes – cues are built from the transcript's timestamps with proper start and end times, and you can adjust any line inline before exporting.
Can I get a VTT file too?
Yes – the same transcript exports to VTT as well as SRT, plus TXT, Markdown, DOCX, PDF, and JSON.
Does this burn subtitles into a video?
No. Pepys gives you a downloadable .srt sidecar file to load alongside your video – it doesn't burn captions into the footage itself.
More free tools
Keep reading
Wav to srt – free to start
Pay as you go – credits never expire, nothing to cancel. Or start free with 60 minutes, no card.