


If you create the captions yourself, add sound cues such as or where appropriate. Also available for foreign language subtitles! Rather not use caption files, and get captions added directly to your videos? Rev now offers burned-in captions (open captions). Just check the “burned-in captions” box at checkout and you’ll receive a video with permanent, hard-coded captions added straight to your videos. Send us your video first, and our professional captioners will transcribe your material and provide you with a caption file – usually within 24 hours. The simplest way to prepare your caption file in the right format is to use a service like Rev. It is possible to upload other file formats, but you might have problems later. There are only two caption file formats that Google Drive videos support: SubRip (*.SRT) and SubViewer (*.SUB). Here’s a closer look at each step, including some common errors and their solutions. Finally, add language and title details to make your captions useful. Next, upload it to Google Drive and connect it to your video. First, create your caption file in *.SRT or *.SUB format.

It takes three steps to add video captions to a Google Drive video. Here’s how to add captions to videos in Google Drive. You can even translate them automatically. Thankfully, you can add captions to a Google Drive video in Google Drive.
