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VLC Media Player 3.0.23
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How to Rip a DVD Using VLC Media Player

VLC Media Player 3.0.23 can extract video content from DVD discs using its built-in streaming and format conversion capabilities, though the process differs from dedicated ripping software and works best on DVDs without copy protection.

Understanding DVD Ripping with VLC

How to rip a DVD using VLC media player requires understanding what the software actually does. It doesn't crack encryption or bypass copy protection—it reads unencrypted disc content and saves it as a playable video file. If your DVD has CSS (Content Scramble System) protection, you'll need third-party tools first. Without protection, VLC handles the job directly.

The application supports virtually all video codecs and containers, making it ideal for converting DVD video streams into MP4, AVI, WebM, or MKV files. Since the player launched in 1996 and remains open source with zero ads, it's reliable for basic extraction work.

Requirements Before You Start

Your system needs write access to an external drive with sufficient storage. A single DVD typically requires 4–8 GB of free space in its final format. Ensure VLC's security features won't block the operation; on Windows, User Account Control may prompt you during file writing.

For Mac and Linux users, the process mirrors Windows, though file paths differ. Linux systems sometimes require additional packages for full codec support, which you can install via package managers.

How to Rip a DVD Using VLC Media Player

Step 1: Open the Media Menu

Launch the player and click MediaOpen Disc. Select the DVD drive containing your disc. VLC automatically detects the disc type and displays available titles.

Step 2: Configure Output Settings

This is where most users stumble. Go to MediaConvert/Save (not just "Open"). The Convert dialog opens with a dropdown showing your DVD disc. Select your target DVD title from the list. Click the wrench icon to set codec preferences: H.264 for video, MP3 or AAC for audio. Leave bitrate at 1024 kbps for quality retention.

Step 3: Choose Your Output Format

Click the dropdown under "Profile" and select your desired container. MP4 works across all devices. MKV preserves multiple audio tracks and subtitle streams if your DVD contains them. WebM compresses aggressively but produces smaller files.

Step 4: Save and Process

Click the folder icon to name your output file and choose the destination directory. Hit Start and let the conversion run. Depending on disc length and your processor, expect 30 minutes to 2 hours.

Pro Tip: The streaming quality setting affects ripping speed dramatically. Before converting your entire DVD, test with a single chapter. Open ToolsPreferencesInput/Codecs and enable hardware acceleration if your GPU supports it. This cuts conversion time by 40–50% on modern systems.

Comparing Your Options

While VLC handles basic ripping without additional cost, specialized tools like Media Player Classic BE or The KMPlayer offer faster processing and better handling of protected content. However, both require separate download and installation steps. The free media player you already have (VLC) avoids that friction.

Format Conversion and Playback

Learn how to configure playback settings to test your ripped file before deleting the original disc. The player's audio effects and video filters let you adjust color grading, normalize volume, or add subtitles during the conversion process itself—saving an extra editing step.

Security Considerations

How to rip a DVD using VLC media player remains legal for personal backup of content you own. Understand what VLC Media Player offers in terms of built-in protections. The application runs no background processes and contains no telemetry, making it safer than proprietary alternatives.

Test your workflow on a single title before batch-converting multiple DVDs. File corruption is rare but possible if your drive runs out of space mid-conversion.