Convert WebM to MP4 — Offline
Drop one or more WebM (VP9/VP8) files onto MiniMax Converter and get H.264 MP4s that play almost anywhere. Pick a quality level, batch a whole folder, and let it run locally — no upload, no file-size limit, no watermark.
How to convert
- Drop one or more WebM files (or a whole folder) onto MiniMax Converter.
- Choose MP4 as the output format from the format chooser.
- Set the quality level (the slider maps to ffmpeg's CRF; default is a balanced setting) and optionally enable hardware encoding if your GPU supports it.
- Click convert and save the H.264 MP4 files to your chosen folder.
Quality and what to expect
WebM uses VP9 or VP8 video; MP4 uses H.264. Since these are different codecs, the conversion re-encodes the video — it is lossy, not a passthrough copy. The audio (usually Opus or Vorbis inside WebM) is also re-encoded to AAC. A quality slider from 1 to 10 maps to ffmpeg's CRF (default is a balanced CRF 23); higher settings preserve more detail at the cost of a larger file. Output gets +faststart so MP4s start playing before they finish downloading.
Why convert WebM to MP4 at all?
WebM is a web-native container that many devices and editing tools still refuse to open — older TVs, some phones, PowerPoint, iMovie, and various hardware players expect H.264 MP4. Converting gives you a file that plays virtually everywhere. If your machine has a supported GPU, MiniMax can route encoding through hardware (NVENC, AMF, QSV, VAAPI, or VideoToolbox) for a big speed boost; otherwise it uses the software libx264 encoder.
Why offline?
Online WebM-to-MP4 converters cap file sizes (often 100-500 MB), queue your upload behind everyone else's, throttle bandwidth, and frequently stamp a watermark or inject ads. Local conversion handles any size, runs at the full speed of your CPU or GPU, and your video never leaves your machine — no upload, no account, no telemetry.
Questions and answers
Is converting WebM to MP4 lossless?
No. WebM (VP9/VP8) and MP4 (H.264) are different codecs, so the video is fully re-encoded, which is lossy. Use a higher quality setting on the slider if you want to minimize visible loss, at the cost of a larger file.
Will the audio be kept?
Yes. WebM audio is typically Opus or Vorbis, neither of which MP4 supports, so it is re-encoded to AAC. The audio track stays in sync with the video.
Can I convert a whole folder of WebM files at once?
Yes. Drop multiple files or a folder and they are batch-processed concurrently, using several CPU cores at once rather than one file at a time.
Does it use my GPU to speed things up?
It can. If a supported hardware H.264 encoder is available (NVENC, AMF, QSV, VAAPI, or VideoToolbox) and you enable hardware encoding, MiniMax uses it; otherwise it falls back to the software libx264 encoder, which works everywhere.
Related tools
Get MiniMax Converter
Cross-platform desktop app. Linux free for non-commercial use; Windows & macOS one-time €20 license. No subscription, no telemetry, no account.