Subtitle Converter

JSON to LRC Subtitle Converter

Quickly convert Structured JSON subtitles to LyRiCs locally in your browser. Timelines and subtitle content are never uploaded.

1

Choose conversion formats

Select the source and target subtitle formats

2

Add subtitle content

Paste content or choose a file

UTF-8 text supported0 characters

What happens when converting JSON to LRC?

Structured JSON content is parsed into a unified millisecond timeline before being exported as LyRiCs. Valid timing and subtitle text are preserved.

LRC output stores only each subtitle's start time because the format does not support end times.

JSON input supports an array of subtitles or an object containing a cues or subtitles array.

About JSON and LRC subtitle formats

Learn what each file format is, how it is structured, where it is commonly used, and what to consider during conversion.

Source file format

JSON · Structured JSON

JSON, or JavaScript Object Notation, is a structured data-interchange format rather than one industry-standard subtitle specification. Explicit fields can represent timing, text, and extensible metadata.

File structure
This tool uses a JSON object containing a cues array. Each cue has start_ms, end_ms, and text fields representing the start time, end time, and subtitle text.
Common uses
JSON is useful for subtitle software development, API exchange, batch processing, data analysis, automation, and preserving structured subtitle data for later programmatic or AI processing.
Conversion notes
Subtitle JSON schemas vary between applications. This tool can read subtitle arrays and objects containing cues or subtitles arrays, and it exports a consistent cues structure.

Target file format

LRC · LyRiCs

LRC, short for LyRiCs, is a synchronized lyrics format. A timestamp before each lyric line lets music players reveal lyrics as a song progresses.

File structure
A typical LRC line uses a [minutes:seconds.fraction] lyric-text structure. Files may also contain title, artist, album, and offset metadata, and one line can carry multiple timestamps.
Common uses
LRC is commonly used by music players, desktop lyrics displays, mobile music apps, karaoke lyrics, and tools for creating synchronized song lyrics.
Conversion notes
Standard LRC normally stores only the start time of each lyric line. When converting to a subtitle format, an end time must be inferred from the next valid lyric timestamp.