Free YouTube Transcribe

Free YouTube Transcript Generator

Paste a link.
Read the video.

The full transcript of any YouTube video in seconds. Searchable, with clickable timestamps, in every language the video has, downloadable as TXT, SRT, or VTT.

Works with youtube.com links, youtu.be short links, and Shorts. No account, no quotas, no catch.

How it works

Three steps, about five seconds.

1

Copy a YouTube link

Any video URL works: youtube.com, youtu.be short links, and Shorts. An 11-character video ID works too.

2

Paste it above

The transcript loads the moment you paste. No page reload, no waiting screen, no account.

3

Read, search, export

Jump the video from any timestamp, search inside the text, then copy it or download TXT, SRT, or VTT.

Features

Everything the other tools charge for, or forgot.

Download SRT, VTT & TXT

Real subtitle formats, not just a wall of text. Drop the .srt straight into your editor, the .vtt onto your site.

Search inside the video

Find the exact moment something was said. Matching lines filter and highlight as you type.

Clickable timestamps

Every line is linked to the player. Click a timestamp and the video jumps to that second.

Every caption language

Switch between all the caption tracks a video has, uploaded and auto-generated, in any language the creator published.

Copy your way

Plain text for notes, timestamped for reference, or pre-wrapped in a summary prompt ready to paste into ChatGPT or Claude.

Free means free

No account, no monthly quota, no credits that run out mid-video. The tool you see is the whole deal.

Turn any YouTube video into text

Free YouTube Transcribe is a free YouTube transcript generator that converts any public YouTube video to text in seconds. Paste a video link (a regular youtube.com URL, a youtu.be short link, or a YouTube Short) and the full transcript appears instantly on the same page. There is no account to create, no software to install, and no limit on how many videos you can transcribe or how long they run. It works on desktop and mobile, in any modern browser.

How to get the transcript of a YouTube video

Getting a YouTube video transcript takes three steps. First, copy the video's link from your browser's address bar or the Share button. Second, paste it into the box at the top of this page; the transcript starts loading the moment you paste. Third, read, search, copy, or download the text. Every line carries a clickable timestamp, so you can jump the built-in player to the exact moment something was said. That is handy when you need to check a quote against the original video.

If a video has captions in several languages, the language picker switches between every track the creator published, including YouTube's auto-generated ones. And when auto-captions arrive as one long run-on sentence, the "Fix punctuation" option tidies the punctuation and capitalization into readable sentences, right in your browser.

Download YouTube subtitles as TXT, SRT, or VTT

Most transcript tools stop at copy-and-paste. This one exports real files: plain text with or without timestamps for notes and documents, SubRip (.srt) subtitle files that drop straight into video editors like Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, or CapCut, and WebVTT (.vtt) caption files ready for the web. Cue timings are preserved exactly, so downloaded subtitles stay in sync with the video. Each transcript also shows its word count and estimated reading time, so you know what you are getting into before you commit to a 4-hour lecture.

If you would rather summarize than read, "Copy for AI" copies the whole transcript wrapped in a ready-made prompt you can paste into ChatGPT, Claude, or any AI assistant for an instant summary, key points, or a translation.

Who uses a YouTube transcript generator?

Content creators repurpose their videos into blog posts, newsletters, and social captions without retyping a word. Students and researchers pull accurate quotes from lectures, interviews, and documentaries: the search box finds the exact line, and the timestamp proves the source. Journalists verify what was actually said, and when. Language learners read along while they listen. Accessibility teams produce caption files for republished video, and SEO teams turn spoken content into indexable text so search engines can finally read it.

Where the transcripts come from

Transcripts are generated from the caption tracks YouTube publishes for each video: creator-uploaded subtitles when they exist, and YouTube's automatic speech recognition otherwise. Auto-generated captions are impressively accurate for clear speech, and this tool marks them "(auto)" so you always know what you are reading. Videos with no captions at all (rare for anything public) can't be transcribed yet, but YouTube usually adds auto-captions within a few hours of upload.

Free means free

Plenty of "free" transcript sites cap you at a handful of videos a month, hide exports behind a sign-up, or meter you with credits. This tool doesn't. Because transcripts come from caption data YouTube already publishes, serving them costs almost nothing, so everything on this page, from unlimited transcripts to SRT downloads, stays free without an account. Paste the last video you watched and see for yourself.

FAQ

Questions, answered.

How do I get the transcript of a YouTube video?

Paste the video link into the box at the top of this page. The full transcript appears right below it within a couple of seconds, with no upload, no account, and no page reload. From there you can search it, copy it, or download it as TXT, SRT, or VTT.

Is there a free YouTube transcript generator?

Yes, you’re looking at one. freeyoutubetranscribe.com turns any YouTube link into a full transcript in seconds, with no account, watermark, or usage limits. Unlike most transcript tools there is no premium tier at all: search, clickable timestamps, language switching, and TXT, SRT, and VTT downloads are all included.

How do I copy the transcript from a YouTube video?

Paste the video link above, then use the Copy button over the transcript. You can copy the plain text, copy it with timestamps, or copy it wrapped in a ready-made summary prompt for an AI assistant like ChatGPT or Claude. It’s much faster than selecting text in YouTube’s own transcript panel, which drags timestamps along and loses formatting.

Can I convert a YouTube video to text?

Yes. This tool converts any public YouTube video to text using the video’s captions. Paste the URL and the spoken words appear as readable, searchable text you can copy or download. It works with regular videos and Shorts, in any language the video has captions for.

Is this really free? What’s the catch?

It’s free with no catch: no account, no monthly quota, no credits, no watermark, and no limit on the number or length of videos. Transcripts come from caption data YouTube already publishes, which costs us almost nothing to fetch, so we don’t need to charge for it.

Can I download the transcript as SRT or VTT subtitles?

Yes. Along with plain text (.txt, with or without timestamps), you can download proper SubRip (.srt) and WebVTT (.vtt) subtitle files with correct cue timings, ready for video editors, media players, or the web.

Does YouTube automatically transcribe videos?

Yes. YouTube automatically generates captions for most public videos within minutes to a few hours of upload, and many creators also upload their own edited subtitles. This tool reads both kinds and marks auto-generated tracks with “(auto)” in the language picker, so you always know which one you’re reading.

Where do the transcripts come from? How accurate are they?

They’re YouTube’s own caption tracks. If the creator uploaded captions, you get those word-for-word. Otherwise you get YouTube’s auto-generated captions, which are very good for clear speech but can stumble on heavy accents, crosstalk, or technical jargon. Tracks marked “(auto)” in the language picker are auto-generated.

Why does a video say it has no transcript?

A few possibilities: the video is very new (YouTube usually takes minutes to a few hours to generate auto-captions), the creator disabled captions, the speech couldn’t be recognized, or the video is private or age-restricted. Trying again later often works for new videos.

Can I get the transcript in another language?

If the video has caption tracks in other languages (many popular videos do), use the language picker above the transcript to switch between them, including auto-generated ones. On-the-fly machine translation of transcripts isn’t available yet; for now, the “Copy for AI” option pairs well with any AI chatbot, which will translate the transcript for free.

Can I get a YouTube transcript on my phone?

Yes. This site works in any mobile browser: paste a YouTube link the same way and read, search, copy, or download the transcript. There’s nothing to install, and the transcript view is built to stay readable on a small screen.

Does it work with YouTube Shorts and live streams?

Shorts work: paste the Shorts link like any other. Live streams work once the stream has ended and YouTube has processed captions for the replay.

Can it fix the punctuation of auto-generated captions?

Yes. Tick “Fix punctuation” above the transcript and the tool tidies punctuation and capitalization into readable sentences. It works right in your browser, so it’s free no matter how long the video is; the first use takes a little longer to get ready, and after that it’s quick. Only punctuation and capitalization are adjusted; the wording itself is never changed. English captions for now.

Can it transcribe a video that has no captions at all?

Not yet. This tool reads YouTube’s caption data rather than running its own speech recognition, which is what keeps it instant and free. Since YouTube auto-captions nearly every public video, genuinely caption-less videos are rare.

Is it legal to get the transcript of a YouTube video?

Transcripts here come from caption data YouTube itself makes public for each video. Using them for personal reference, study, notes, accessibility, or research is what this tool is for. The content still belongs to its creator, so republishing a transcript wholesale would need their permission.

Try it on the last video you watched.

Grab any link from your YouTube history. The transcript is a paste away.

Get a free transcript