Convert OGG to MKV — Free Online Converter
Convert Ogg Vorbis (.ogg) to Matroska Video (.mkv) online for free. Fast, secure audio conversion with no watermarks or registration....
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Upload your .ogg file by dragging it into the upload area or clicking to browse.
Choose your output settings. The default settings work great for most files.
Click Convert and download your .mkv file when it's ready.
About OGG to MKV Conversion
OGG Vorbis is Xiph.org's open-source lossy codec used widely in gaming, Linux, and web applications. MKV (Matroska Video) is an open-source multimedia container that supports virtually every audio and video codec. MKV is the standard container for media servers (Plex, Jellyfin, Kodi) and personal media libraries.
Converting OGG to MKV wraps the audio inside the Matroska container, typically for integration with video production workflows or media server libraries. MKV can hold Vorbis audio natively, meaning the audio stream can often be remuxed without re-encoding.
Why Convert OGG to MKV?
MKV is the preferred container for building media files with multiple audio tracks, subtitles, and chapter markers. Converting OGG audio to MKV prepares it for muxing with video streams or creating multi-track audio files within the Matroska ecosystem.
Since MKV natively supports Vorbis audio, the conversion can be a zero-quality-loss remux — the Vorbis stream is simply repackaged from the OGG container into MKV. This makes MKV an efficient target when you need Matroska container features without re-encoding.
Common Use Cases
- Preparing OGG audio tracks for muxing with video in MKV production
- Building multi-language audio MKV files with Vorbis tracks
- Converting OGG for Plex, Jellyfin, or Kodi media server integration
- Creating MKV audio files with chapter markers for long-form content
- Packaging OGG game audio in MKV for multimedia distribution
How It Works
FFmpeg can remux the Vorbis stream directly from OGG to MKV without re-encoding (-c:a copy), since MKV natively supports Vorbis. Alternatively, the audio can be transcoded to FLAC, AAC, Opus, or any other codec supported by MKV. The Matroska container uses EBML structure for efficient seeking and metadata storage. Vorbis comment metadata transfers to MKV tags.
Quality & Performance
When remuxing Vorbis directly (-c:a copy), quality is identical to the source — no encoding occurs. When transcoding to another codec, quality depends on the target codec and bitrate. The MKV container adds zero quality degradation regardless of codec choice.
Device Compatibility
| Device | OGG | MKV |
|---|---|---|
| Windows PC | Partial | Partial |
| macOS | Partial | Partial |
| iPhone/iPad | Partial | Partial |
| Android | Native | Partial |
| Linux | Partial | Partial |
| Web Browser | Native | No |
Recommended Settings by Platform
Spotify
Resolution: N/A
Bitrate: 320 kbps
OGG Vorbis preferred
Apple Music
Resolution: N/A
Bitrate: 256 kbps
AAC format required
SoundCloud
Resolution: N/A
Bitrate: 128 kbps
Lossless FLAC/WAV for best quality
Podcast
Resolution: N/A
Bitrate: 128 kbps
MP3 mono for spoken word
Tips for Best Results
- 1Use stream copy (-c:a copy) to remux Vorbis into MKV instantly with zero quality loss
- 2Only transcode if you need a different codec for device compatibility (e.g., AAC for TV playback)
- 3Use .mka extension for audio-only Matroska files
- 4Add chapter markers for audiobooks, lectures, and long recordings
- 5Test playback on target devices — Vorbis in MKV may not be universally supported
Related Conversions
OGG to MKV leverages Matroska's native Vorbis support for zero-quality-loss remuxing, or enables transcoding to any codec within MKV's versatile container.