Clean transcript
Get timestamped text from a public TikTok URL with a readable plain-text view.
Extract the spoken words and captions from a TikTok video so you can read the script without replaying the clip. Start for free.
Example output
00:00 This is how I pack five outfits into one carry-on without wrinkling them.
00:07 Start with the jacket, then roll each outfit around one anchor piece.
00:15 The trick is leaving shoes for last so they lock everything in place.
Video beat: Demonstration
The transcript preserves the step order, making a visual tutorial easier to rewrite or brief.
Ideal for studying short-form videos, competitor hooks, caption structure, and creator messaging.
Use the video URL when you need to understand what happens inside the clip, not just its caption.
Convert the spoken sequence into timestamped text so the opening, middle, and payoff are easy to scan.
Export or copy the transcript into your research stack with the video context still intact.
Search intent
This page targets users focused on one video asset and the transcript needed to understand or repurpose it.
Document a tutorial without pausing the video every few seconds.
Capture voiceover language from a product demo.
Study how a creator sequences proof and payoff.
Give an editor or writer the text behind a clip.
Creator workflow
Target the full TikTok transcript workflow: capture the words, understand the opening, and reuse the structure.
Get timestamped text from a public TikTok URL with a readable plain-text view.
Identify the first-three-second hook, CTA, emotional trigger, and reusable angle.
Start with TXT, then unlock SRT, VTT, CSV, DOCX, and JSON on paid plans.
Anonymous and logged-in transcript results are noindex unless explicitly published.
Popular searches
Jump to the version that matches what you need: transcripts, extraction, conversion, or video transcription.
It is the text version of a TikTok video's spoken words and available captions, usually organized by timestamp.
The tool focuses on transcript text from the public video and available caption data, then keeps the output easy to review.
Text is easier to search, quote, summarize, compare, and hand off to a writer or editor.
No. The video must be public and accessible from the shared URL.