AVI MKV

Process Your AVI to MKV documents simply

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How to process AVI to MKV

Step 1: Deliver your AVI files using the button above or by place and set.

Step 2: Click the 'Process' button to start the processing.

Step 3: Obtain your converted MKV files.


AVI to MKV Processing FAQ

How do I re-encode AVI to MKV without visible quality loss?
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Upload your AVI file and the converter applies a CRF-based re-encode targeting visually-lossless MKV output (CRF 18 for H.264 / H.265, CRF 30 for VP9 / AV1 are the rough equivalents). WebM targets default to VP9; MP4 targets default to H.264 for the broadest playback support.
The codec follows the MKV container. MKV = WebM picks VP9 (or AV1 if you opt in for ~30% smaller files); MKV = MP4 picks H.264; MKV = MKV picks H.265. The advanced options let you override the codec independently of the container.
Yes — audio is re-muxed when source and target share a codec (e.g. AAC inside both MP4 and MKV) or re-encoded to a MKV-container-friendly codec otherwise (Opus / Vorbis inside WebM, AAC inside MP4). Multi-track audio is preserved when MKV supports it.
By default, framerate is unchanged (AVI 24 fps stays 24 fps in MKV; 60 fps stays 60 fps). For interlaced sources we deinterlace and pick the field-doubled rate; you can force a specific framerate (e.g. 30 fps for web upload limits) in the advanced options.
Same-codec re-muxes (e.g. AVI → MKV where both can hold H.264) produce nearly-identical sizes. Codec changes can swing it dramatically: H.264 → VP9/AV1 typically cuts the file 30-50% at the same visual quality; H.264 → H.265 roughly halves it; VP9 → H.264 grows it.
WebM (VP9 / VP8) plays natively in Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Safari 14+. MP4 / H.264 plays everywhere — desktop browsers, iOS, Android, Smart TVs. MKV needs VLC on iOS. The advanced "device compatibility" preset picks the safest combination for the target platform.
Same-codec re-mux: under a minute (no re-encode pass). Re-encode to a different codec: typically 0.3-0.7× source duration on our pipeline, so a 1-hour AVI → MKV finishes in 18-40 minutes. AV1 is the slowest target; VP9 and H.265 are mid-range; H.264 is fastest.
Up to 8K (7680×4320) on Premium. Free users are capped at 4K (3840×2160) per the per-file size limit. HDR metadata (HDR10, Dolby Vision) is preserved where both AVI and MKV containers support it; tone-mapping to SDR is offered when the MKV pipeline cannot hold HDR.
Yes — uploaded video files are processed in isolated workers and deleted within minutes of completion. We never view, store, retain, or share content. The full data-retention policy is at /privacy/.
Not in the same step — use /trim-video/ or /resize-video/ to clip and crop the AVI first, then queue the AVI → MKV step. Doing them in series is faster than re-encoding the whole file just to shave seconds off the ends.
Almost always a bitrate-too-low setting. Re-encoding a high-bitrate AVI into a lower-bitrate MKV at the default CRF compresses heavily on motion-heavy scenes. Drop CRF to 16-18 (H.264) or 24-28 (VP9 / AV1) or set an explicit target bitrate and re-run to recover quality.
Yes — embedded subtitle tracks (mov_text in MP4, SRT/ASS inside MKV, WebVTT in WebM) are preserved when both AVI and MKV containers support them. Burned-in (hardsub) subtitles transfer automatically because they are part of the video frame itself.

AVI

AVI files can contain both audio and video data, widely included but with larger file sizes.

MKV

MKV (Matroska) can hold unlimited video, audio, and subtitle tracks in a single file, ideal for movies.


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