Why is Add Subtitles to Video not behaving as expected?
A short troubleshooting walk-through of the four most common ways Add Subtitles to Video can frustrate you, and how to fix each one.
You've tried to compress / convert / process a video and the result is wrong — same size as before, broken, or just refuses to work. Frustrating, but the failure mode is almost always one of a small set of causes. Here's how to diagnose and fix each one.
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Cause 1: The video is already compressed
If a video has been compressed before — by a previous tool, by the source app, or by the platform that originally produced it — there's not much left to squeeze. Re-compressing a heavily-compressed JPG might save 2%, not 50%. Diagnosis: check the original file size against typical sizes for the content. Fix: accept the limit, or work backwards to find an earlier, less-compressed version of the source.
Cause 2: Embedded high-resolution content
A video that contains very large embedded images, fonts, or layers can stay huge no matter what you do — because the compression engine is working around those embedded blobs, not on them. Diagnosis: if a PDF / document is unexpectedly large, check whether it contains scanned page images at 600+ DPI. Fix: Add Subtitles to Video has an option to downsample embedded images; turning it on usually solves this.
Cause 3: Wrong tool for the content
Some videos need a specialised tool — a video needs a video compressor, not a general one; a vector graphic needs different handling than a raster. Diagnosis: check what's actually inside the file. Fix: Add Subtitles to Video is built for videos of this kind; if your file is a different format wearing the wrong extension, a converter step solves it.
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Cause 4: Browser-specific issues
Very rarely, Add Subtitles to Video fails because of a browser quirk — usually old browsers without WebAssembly support, or content blockers that interfere with the worker that runs the compression. Diagnosis: try in a different browser (Chrome / Firefox / Safari latest versions all work). Fix: if the issue persists, disable extensions in an incognito window and try again.
Cause 5: The video is corrupted
If the source video won't open in any program, no tool can compress it cleanly. Diagnosis: open the original in a stand-alone viewer or built-in OS preview. If it fails there, it's the file. Fix: find a clean copy or re-export from the original source.
Frequently asked questions
Is my browser too old?
Add Subtitles to Video needs WebAssembly support. Any Chrome / Firefox / Safari / Edge from the last five years has it. Internet Explorer doesn't.
Where can I get help if none of these fixes work?
Report the issue with a sample video (if shareable) — there's almost always a known fix, even if it's a workaround.
Why does my video stay the same size after compression?
Almost always because it was already aggressively compressed. The compression engine literally has no slack to remove.
My video works in other tools but not Add Subtitles to Video. What's different?
Add Subtitles to Video runs strict validation to avoid silently producing broken output. Other tools sometimes accept malformed input and silently corrupt it further.
Related guides
- Add Subtitles to Video for a video you'll print
- Frequently asked questions about Add Subtitles to Video
- How to add subtitles to 50+ videos at once
- Add Subtitles to Video on a scanned video
- Why is Add Page Numbers to PDF not behaving as expected? Common causes
- Why is Video Trimmer not behaving as expected? Common causes
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Last reviewed May 2026. File-size limits, portal requirements, and software defaults change over time — always verify with the destination platform before uploading time-sensitive documents. References to third-party services and products are for descriptive purposes only and do not imply any partnership or endorsement.