🔇 Mute Video Online
Drop your video here
Remove the audio track from any video. Uses stream copy — instant processing, zero quality loss.
This will completely remove the audio stream from your video. The video quality remains untouched (stream copy). Processing is instant.
Video is uploaded, processed server-side, then auto-deleted after 60 min.
How to Remove Audio from a Video
Drag & drop or click Browse. Supports MP4, WebM, AVI, MOV, MKV and more. Max 2 GB.
The audio track is completely removed. Video quality stays untouched. Processing is instant.
Click the download button. Your file is auto-deleted from the server after 60 minutes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will muting affect video quality?
No. The video stream is copied as-is — only the audio track is removed. There is zero video quality loss.
Can I restore the audio later?
No. Once the audio track is removed, it cannot be restored from the output file. Keep your original file if you might need the audio later.
Why would I want to mute a video?
Common reasons include removing background noise or music before adding a voiceover, creating silent loops for presentations or digital signage, preparing video for social media where you want to add different audio, and removing copyrighted music.
Does this reduce file size?
Yes. The audio track typically accounts for 5-15% of total file size, so removing it will make the file slightly smaller.
What formats are supported?
All major video formats are supported: MP4, WebM, AVI, MOV, MKV, and more. The output format matches your input.
Why Mute a Video?
Removing audio from video is useful in many scenarios: preparing clips for social media where you'll add music or narration later, creating silent background loops for websites or presentations, removing copyrighted music before sharing, and eliminating unwanted background noise from screen recordings.
Our tool uses FFmpeg's stream copy with the -an flag, which strips the audio without touching the video data. This means instant processing and zero quality degradation — your video output is bit-for-bit identical to the original video stream.