Free Video Subtitle Remover

Remove hardcoded (burned-in) subtitles from videos using AI inpainting.

Choose fixed region for subtitles at the bottom, or dynamic detection to find text anywhere in the frame.

Drop your video here

or click to browse • MP4, AVI, MOV, MKV, WebM

Early Access — Limited Beta

Editing is a pain in the ass, right?

That's why we're building Cubix. No more editing hell.

AI Video Editor

Drop your footage, tell it what you want. Cubix cuts, captions, color grades, and exports — fully on its own. No timeline. No manual work. Just results.

Cinematic Screen Recorder

Hit record on Windows. Auto-zoom, cinematic backgrounds, and studio-quality audio kick in automatically — your screen recording looks edited before you've touched a thing.

No credit card required5 min setupFree to start
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Fixed Region

Fast and reliable. Target a fixed bottom or top strip where subtitles are always located — perfect for most content.

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Dynamic Detection

Finds high-contrast text pixels anywhere in the frame. Use when subtitle position varies or you need more thorough coverage.

AI Inpainting

Uses OpenCV Telea or Navier-Stokes inpainting to reconstruct the background where subtitles were — frame by frame.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the video subtitle remover free?

Yes. Remove hardcoded subtitles from videos for free with no signup, no watermarks, and no software to install.

Can it remove burned-in (hardcoded) subtitles?

Yes. The tool uses OpenCV inpainting to reconstruct the background pixels where subtitles were. It works on burned-in text that cannot be removed with a simple track delete.

What is Fixed Region vs Dynamic Detection?

Fixed Region targets a fixed strip at the bottom (and optionally top) of the frame — fast and reliable when subtitles are always in the same place. Dynamic Detection finds high-contrast text pixels anywhere in the frame.

What video formats are supported?

The tool accepts MP4, AVI, MOV, MKV, and WebM video files. Output is always an MP4 file.

Will the removal be perfect?

Results depend on the background complexity behind the subtitles. Simple backgrounds produce excellent results. Complex, moving backgrounds may show some artifacts.