

If, for some reason, VLC does not automatically load your subtitle file, you can just right-click on the video, choose Subtitle and click Add Subtitle File.

Additionally, if there are multiple SRT files available, it will pick all of them up and let you choose. VLC will normally even find the subtitle file if it is in a subfolder like SUBS or SUBTITLES.Īlso, it will look for all SRT files automatically, meaning you don’t actually have to name the SRT file exactly like the video file.

VLC Media Player is so good that all you normally have to do is just load the video file and let it load the subtitle file automatically. It’ll work for AVI, MP4, and even MKV files with SUB and IDX files. In addition to all of that, it almost always flawlessly shows subtitles for videos when the SRT file is in the same folder and has the same name as the video file. It’s awesome because it can play pretty much any video file by default, it can play damaged or corrupt video files and it can even fix those annoying upside down videos you get from your smartphone sometimes. Also, check how the Turn On Subtitles on YouTube Kids.After testing all kinds of media players for hours, I realized the easiest way to watch any video with a separate SRT file is to use VLC Media Player.
