TS to HEVC conversion is the process of taking video stored in the MPEG-2 Transport Stream (TS) container—commonly used for broadcast, DVB, and captured digital recordings—and re-encoding the video stream into the HEVC (H.265) codec and saving it in a compatible container. This conversion reduces file size and improves compression efficiency while preserving playback compatibility on HEVC-capable players.
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Read guide →Drag your .TS file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .hevc as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .HEVC file once ready.
TS files typically use the MIME type video/MP2T and serve as containers for MPEG-2 video streams. HEVC files utilize the video/hevc MIME type and encode video using the H.265 codec for better compression. TS is popular in broadcasting, while HEVC is widely used for streaming and high-quality video storage.
The HEVC (.HEVC) format is commonly used for video. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like TS.
While specific technical details aren't available here, HEVC files generally serve the purpose of storing video effectively within their domain.
Easily convert your TS files to the highly efficient HEVC format using our online TS to HEVC converter. Designed for seamless video compression and improved playback compatibility, our converter streamlines your video processing needs without installing software.
TS is a container format commonly used for broadcasting and storing video streams, often resulting in large file sizes. HEVC is a modern video codec that compresses video files more efficiently, delivering similar or better quality at a fraction of the size compared to TS. Choosing HEVC over TS is ideal for streaming and storage optimization.
Keep source-to-output ratio reasonable: for 1080p TS sources, aim for HEVC files between 500 MB and 2 GB depending on length and CRF; very long recordings should be split to preserve reliability.
Preserve quality by using a CRF between 18–23 for near-transparent results; increase CRF (higher number) to reduce size at the expense of detail.
For batch conversions, use a tool that supports queueing and hardware acceleration (NVENC, QuickSync, or VCE) to speed processing and reduce CPU load.
Be aware TS containers may include multiple audio or subtitle streams and broadcast-specific flags; verify streams after conversion to ensure correct language and timing.
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Format-specific limitation: HEVC provides better compression but may not be playable on older devices; provide an H.264 fallback if broad compatibility is required.