Know who said what
Speaker-aware transcription separates voices into readable turns instead of one long block of text.
Need to find one quote without replaying an entire recording? Turn audio into clean, speaker-labeled text with timestamps, review it in the browser, then export TXT or SRT in one click.
Or choose a file from your device. Your audio is sent only for transcription.
MP3 up to 500 MB · other formats up to 25 MB
A direct definition
An MP3 transcript is a searchable text version of an MP3 audio file. A transcription tool converts spoken words into readable text and can add speaker labels and timestamps, making recordings easier to review, quote, caption, and export as TXT or SRT.
A transcript preserves the wording of the recording rather than replacing it with a short summary. That makes it useful when accuracy, attribution, or the exact phrasing matters. Recording quality still affects the result, so review important names, numbers, and quotations against the source audio.
Learn how to improve transcription accuracyNot just a text dump
The useful part starts after speech becomes text. Every detail is designed to help you find, verify, and reuse what was said.
Speaker-aware transcription separates voices into readable turns instead of one long block of text.
Every segment gets a timestamp, so you can trace a quote back to the original recording fast.
Search names, topics, or phrases inside the finished transcript without replaying the whole file.
Copy clean text or export TXT and SRT files for notes, captions, editing, or your next workflow.
Three quiet steps
No timeline setup, model menu, or export maze. The technical work stays out of your way.
Drop an MP3 or choose another supported audio file from your device.
Language detection, speaker turns, punctuation, and timing happen together.
Search the transcript, copy a passage, or export clean TXT and SRT files.
Choose the useful output
TXT and SRT contain the same spoken material, but they solve different problems. TXT is made for reading and editing. SRT keeps numbered time ranges so a video player or editor can place each subtitle at the right moment.
| Export | Best for | What it keeps | Open it with |
|---|---|---|---|
| TXT | Notes, quotes, articles, research, and searchable archives | Plain text with readable speaker labels and timestamps | Any text editor, document app, or knowledge base |
| SRT | Video subtitles, captions, review cuts, and editing | Sequence numbers plus subtitle start and end times | YouTube, Vimeo, Premiere Pro, Resolve, and media players |
One recording, many outcomes
Podcasts
Subtitles
Interviews
Formats
Accuracy
“Your audio should become text, not public content.”
Privacy by design
The app sends your upload to the configured transcription provider, returns the result, and does not save the raw MP3 to its own database. You decide what to copy or download. Read the privacy policy for the full handling details.
Good to know
Upload your MP3, choose the spoken language or leave automatic detection on, and select Create transcript. The tool converts the speech into readable, speaker-labeled text with timestamps. Review the result in your browser, search for a phrase, then copy it or download TXT or SRT.
The tool accepts resumable MP3 uploads up to 500 MB. M4A, WAV, FLAC, MP4, MPEG, OGG, and WebM files can be up to 25 MB.
Yes. The default transcription model detects speaker turns and returns timed segments when the provider supports them.
Yes. Every finished transcript can be exported as SRT for subtitles or TXT for notes, documents, and publishing workflows.
This app forwards the audio to the configured transcription provider and does not save the raw file in its database. Avoid uploading recordings you do not have permission to process.