Upload GIF
Click or drag a GIF file here
Only one GIF file is accepted
Maximum file size: 200MBGIF to Videos
Supported Input
Upload GIF files only. Single file per conversion. Max size: 200MB.
Outputs
Convert to MP4, MOV, AVI, WebM, or MKV. Configure FPS, quality, and optional resize presets. Videos created from GIFs are silent by default.
Fast & Reliable
Optimized encoding for clean outputs and smooth playback.
Usage & Tips
Pro Tip:
Use MP4 for widest compatibility and WebM for smaller web embeds. Resize down to reduce file size.
What is the GIF to Videos Tool?
The GIF to Videos tool converts animated GIFs into video files (MP4, MOV, AVI, WebM, MKV). Set FPS, choose quality, and optionally resize to get smooth, share‑ready outputs. Videos created from GIFs are silent by default.
- Choose MP4 for universal compatibility across platforms.
- Use WebM for efficient web delivery where supported.
- Resize down to dramatically reduce output file size.
How to Convert
- Upload a GIF.
- Select output container: MP4, MOV, AVI, WebM, or MKV.
- Set FPS (1–60) and quality; optionally choose a resize preset (480×360, 640×480, 720p, 1080p).
- Convert and use the result navigation to continue editing.
Best Practices
- Use 15–24 FPS for smooth playback and practical size.
- Resize down to reduce file size.
- Run Optimize to compress further for sharing.
Popular Use Cases
- Convert looping GIFs to MP4 for social platforms.
- Create WebM with smaller sizes for web embeds.
- Prepare MOV files for editing suites.
- Create MKV/AVI for specific workflows and legacy players.
Troubleshooting
- If the file is large, choose a lower preset and smaller resolution.
- Some browsers don’t auto‑play WebM; use MP4 for widest support.
- If previews don’t show, try a different browser.
Frequently Asked Questions
15–24 FPS gives smooth playback and practical file sizes.
Yes. Choose common presets (480×360, 640×480, 720p, 1080p).
Usually yes. WebM uses modern video compression and is efficient for loops.
MP4 is universally compatible. MOV for editing workflows, WebM for web, MKV for archiving, AVI for legacy players.
No. GIFs do not contain audio; generated videos are silent unless you add audio later.