What is MPEG?

Discover what MPEG files are, their extensions, and how they function. Learn when to use MPEG and how it compares to other formats in this complete guide.

Free online file converter tool. Works in Chrome Firefox Safari Edge Opera and other modern browsers on Windows macOS Linux Android and iOS. No software installation or sign-up required. All conversions run directly in your browser, so your files never leave your device. Free to use with no account needed.

MPEG

What is MPEG?

Complete guide to the MPEG file format

Last updated:

Created1993
TypeVideo
Common UseLegacy video

What is MPEG?

MPEG (Moving Picture Experts Group) refers to a family of video and audio compression standards developed by the ISO/IEC Moving Picture Experts Group. In common usage, .mpeg or .mpg files typically contain MPEG-1 or MPEG-2 video. MPEG-1 was finalized in 1993 and was used for Video CD (VCD), while MPEG-2 followed in 1995 and became the standard for DVD video, digital broadcast television, and cable TV.

MPEG-1 targets bitrates up to 1.5 Mbit/s and a maximum resolution of 352x240 (SIF), making it suitable for VCD quality. MPEG-2 extended this to support high bitrates, high definition resolution, and multiple audio tracks, which is why it became the foundation of the DVD standard. MPEG files use a container format called MPEG Program Stream or MPEG Transport Stream, which packages the compressed video and audio together.

How MPEG Video Coding Works

MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 achieve compression through a combination of block-based DCT (like JPEG) and motion compensation, encoding most frames as predictions of nearby frames rather than as complete images.[3] Frames are organized into I-frames (independently coded), P-frames (predicted from previous frames), and B-frames (predicted bidirectionally), grouped into a structure that allows random access and efficient temporal compression.[2]

From VCD to DVD and Broadcast

MPEG-1, finalized in the early 1990s, powered Video CD at roughly VCD resolution and bitrate, while MPEG-2 (also designated ITU-T H.262) extended coding to interlaced content, higher resolutions, and higher bitrates.[3][2] MPEG-2 became the basis for DVD-Video and for digital terrestrial, cable, and satellite television broadcasting.[2]

Streams and Modern Successors

MPEG defines multiplexing layers: a Program Stream suits storage media like DVD, while the more error-resilient Transport Stream is used for broadcast.[2] Later MPEG standards such as MPEG-4 AVC (H.264) and HEVC (H.265) deliver much greater efficiency and have largely displaced MPEG-1/2 for new content, though MPEG-2 remains in legacy broadcast and optical-disc use.[4][1]

Technical Details

Standards BodyISO/IEC Moving Picture Experts Group[1]
MPEG-1 Release1993[1]
MPEG-2 Release1995[1]
File Extension.mpeg / .mpg[1]
MIME Typevideo/mpeg[1]
MPEG-1 Max Resolution352 x 240 (SIF)[1]
MPEG-2 Max Resolution1920 x 1080 (HD)[1]
Used InVCD, DVD, digital broadcast TV[1]

MPEG vs Other Video Formats

FeatureMPEGMP4AVI
TypeContainer[4]ContainerContainer
Codec(s)MPEG-1/MPEG-2[3]H.264, HEVC, AV1Many (DivX, Xvid)
Compression efficiencyLow to moderate[2]HighLow to moderate
Standardized byISO/IEC (MPEG)[4]ISO/IECMicrosoft
Device/browser supportBroad legacyUniversalDesktop legacy
Best forLegacy MPEG videoModern streamingOld archives

MPEG files use older MPEG-1/2 coding with wide compatibility but much lower efficiency than modern MP4.

Pros and Cons

Advantages

Universal Legacy Support

MPEG files can be played by virtually all media players including very old devices and hardware DVD players.

DVD Compatibility

MPEG-2 is the required codec for standard DVD video, making it essential for physical disc creation.

Broadcast Standard

MPEG-2 remains the foundation of digital broadcast television standards worldwide.

Stable and Well-Understood

Decades of deployment mean the format is extremely well supported with no interoperability surprises.

Disadvantages

Poor Compression by Modern Standards

MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 produce much larger files than H.264 or HEVC at the same quality level.

Resolution Limitations

MPEG-1 is limited to low resolutions unsuitable for modern use; MPEG-2 was designed before widespread 4K adoption.

Largely Superseded

Modern video is almost universally encoded in H.264 or HEVC, which are direct descendants of the MPEG standards.

No Modern Features

Lacks support for HDR, modern audio codecs, and advanced container features available in MP4 and MKV.

When to Use MPEG

Here are the most common situations where MPEG is the right choice:

DVD Authoring

MPEG-2 is the required codec when creating standard definition or high definition DVD discs.

Broadcast Contribution

MPEG-2 transport streams are used for digital television broadcast in ATSC (North America) and DVB (Europe) systems.

Legacy Playback

When you encounter old VCD or DVD rip files, MPEG is the format you will find them in.

Format Conversion

Convert legacy MPEG files to modern formats like MP4 or MKV for better compression and compatibility.

Convert MPEG Files

Need to convert your MPEG files? Use our free online converter.

Try Video Converter Free

Frequently Asked Questions about MPEG

What is the difference between MPEG-1 and MPEG-2?

MPEG-1 targets low bitrate VCD-quality video at resolutions up to 352x240. MPEG-2 supports higher bitrates, full HD resolution, multiple audio tracks, and interlaced video, making it suitable for DVD and broadcast.

Is MPEG the same as MP4?

No. MP4 uses the MPEG-4 Part 12 container with H.264 or H.265 video. MPEG files typically contain older MPEG-1 or MPEG-2 video in a Program Stream container. They are related standards but different formats.

Can I play MPEG files on modern systems?

Yes. Windows Media Player, VLC, and most modern media players support MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 video without any plugins.

Should I convert my MPEG files to MP4?

Yes, for modern use. MP4 with H.264 will produce much smaller files at the same or better quality, and offers better compatibility with mobile devices and streaming platforms.

What created MPEG files?

MPEG files were created by video cameras, VCD authoring software, and early DVD ripping tools from the 1990s and early 2000s. Today they are mostly encountered as legacy archives.

References

  1. MPEG video - MDN Web Docs
  2. MPEG-2 Video Encoding (H.262) - Library of Congress
  3. MPEG-1 Video Coding - Library of Congress
  4. Moving Picture Experts Group - Wikipedia