An SRT file is full of cue numbers and timestamps that you do not want when you just need the spoken text.
This tool removes the numbering and timing from each SRT block and returns the plain subtitle text, with an option to keep blank lines between cues.
How to use SRT to TXT
- Paste your SRT subtitles into the left panel.
- Turn on Keep blank lines between cues if you want cue spacing preserved.
- Copy the plain text from the right panel or download it.
What you can do with it
- Turn captions into an article draft.
- Export the spoken text from a subtitle file.
- Review subtitle wording without the timing.
Good to know
An SRT block has three parts: an index number, a timestamp line with an arrow, and one or more lines of text. This tool keeps only the text, dropping the index and timestamp lines.
Frequently asked questions
What gets removed?
The cue index numbers and the timestamp lines are removed; the subtitle text itself is kept.
Can I keep the spacing between cues?
Yes. The keep-blank-lines option preserves a blank line where each cue break was.
Are multi-line cues handled?
Yes. Cues that span several lines keep all their text lines together.