ConfigsApr 18, 2026·3 min read

HandBrake — Open Source Video Transcoder

HandBrake is a free, open-source video transcoder for converting video files between formats. It runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux, and supports hardware-accelerated encoding, batch processing, and a wide range of input and output formats.

Introduction

HandBrake is a video transcoder that converts video from nearly any format to a selection of widely supported codecs. It is used by content creators, archivists, and anyone who needs to re-encode video for different devices or platforms. The project has been actively maintained since 2003 and provides both a graphical interface and a command-line tool.

What HandBrake Does

  • Transcodes video files from virtually any input format to MP4, MKV, and WebM containers
  • Encodes using H.264, H.265, VP9, and AV1 codecs with software or hardware acceleration
  • Provides built-in presets optimized for specific devices and platforms
  • Supports batch scanning and queue-based encoding for processing multiple files
  • Includes filters for deinterlacing, denoising, cropping, scaling, and subtitle burn-in

Architecture Overview

HandBrake is written in C with a GUI layer using GTK on Linux and native frameworks on Windows and macOS. The scanning and encoding pipeline wraps FFmpeg/libav for demuxing and decoding, with encoding handled by x264, x265, SVT-AV1, and hardware encoders (NVENC, QSV, VideoToolbox, VCE). The CLI (HandBrakeCLI) exposes the full pipeline for scripted workflows. Presets are stored as JSON and can be imported/exported.

Self-Hosting & Configuration

  • Download from handbrake.fr or install via your platform package manager
  • Choose a preset from the Presets panel or customize encoding settings manually
  • Enable hardware encoding (if supported) in the Video tab under Video Encoder
  • Configure the output queue for batch processing multiple source files
  • Use HandBrakeCLI for headless or automated transcoding pipelines

Key Features

  • Hardware-accelerated encoding via NVENC, Intel QSV, Apple VideoToolbox, and AMD VCE
  • Built-in AV1 encoding support through SVT-AV1 for next-generation video compression
  • Comprehensive subtitle support including SRT, SSA, VobSub, and PGS with burn-in option
  • Chapter markers, audio track selection, and multiple audio passthrough options
  • JSON-based preset system for consistent encoding across projects

Comparison with Similar Tools

  • FFmpeg — more flexible command-line tool, but requires manual parameter tuning and has no GUI
  • Shutter Encoder — GUI wrapper for FFmpeg with more output formats, but less polished presets
  • VLC — can transcode video, but limited encoding options and not optimized for batch work
  • Adobe Media Encoder — professional tool with tight Adobe integration, but proprietary and subscription-based
  • DaVinci Resolve — full NLE with encoding, but heavier and more complex for simple transcoding tasks

FAQ

Q: What input formats does HandBrake support? A: HandBrake can read almost any video format that FFmpeg/libav supports, including MKV, AVI, MOV, WMV, and DVD/Blu-ray disc structures.

Q: Does HandBrake support hardware encoding? A: Yes. HandBrake supports NVENC (NVIDIA), QSV (Intel), VideoToolbox (Apple), and VCE (AMD) for GPU-accelerated encoding.

Q: Can I use HandBrake from the command line? A: Yes. HandBrakeCLI provides the full feature set for scripted and headless workflows.

Q: Does HandBrake support AV1? A: Yes. HandBrake includes SVT-AV1 for software AV1 encoding and supports hardware AV1 on compatible GPUs.

Sources

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