How are LRC end times generated?
LRC stores lyric start timestamps. When converting LRC to SRT or VTT, each cue ends at the next lyric timestamp. The final lyric gets a short default duration.
Convert LRC lyric timestamps into SRT subtitle cues. Useful when lyrics need to be edited, translated, or delivered as captions.
Files are processed locally in your browser.
LRC stores lyric start timestamps. When converting LRC to SRT or VTT, each cue ends at the next lyric timestamp. The final lyric gets a short default duration.
Yes. If a line contains multiple timestamps, the converter creates one subtitle cue for each timestamp with the same lyric text.
LRC sits between music players, lyric videos, karaoke drafts, and caption workflows. A browser converter makes it easy to move timed text between subtitle editors and lyric tools.
Many creators already have lyrics or subtitles in SRT or WebVTT format. Converting those cues to LRC gives music players and lyric tools a compact timestamped lyric file without retyping timing by hand.
When lyrics need translation, review, or publishing as video captions, converting LRC into SRT or VTT makes the timing editable in subtitle tools and compatible with common video platforms.
The converter runs in the browser. Lyrics, captions, and subtitle files are processed locally so you can quickly test a format change without uploading drafts.