OGV

What is OGV?

Complete guide to the OGV file format

Year2008
TypeVideo
UsageOpen source video

What is it?

OGV is the file extension for Ogg video files, combining the Ogg container format with the Theora video codec and the Vorbis audio codec. Theora is a free and open video compression format derived from VP3, released by the Xiph.Org Foundation in 2004. OGV emerged as a web video format around 2008 when the HTML5 video element was being standardized, as browser developers were seeking a royalty-free video format that could be included in the open web platform.

The format is entirely patent-free and royalty-free, which made it attractive for open-source software and projects that wanted to avoid the licensing complexities of H.264. Firefox, Chrome, and Opera supported OGV natively in their early HTML5 video implementations. While WebM (using the VP8/VP9 codec) has largely replaced OGV in web contexts, OGV remains used in open-source projects and communities such as Wikimedia Commons, which uses it for video uploads.

Technical Specifications

DeveloperXiph.Org Foundation
File Extension.ogv / .ogg
MIME Typevideo/ogg
Video CodecTheora (VP3-based)
Audio CodecVorbis or FLAC
LicenseCompletely royalty-free and patent-free
Browser SupportFirefox, Chrome, Opera (native)

Pros & Cons

Advantages

Completely Royalty-Free

No patents or licensing fees - safe to use in any software including open-source projects.

Open Standard

Fully documented open format with open-source reference implementations.

Wikimedia Compatible

The preferred upload format for video on Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons.

Broad Linux Support

Native support in all major Linux distributions without licensing concerns.

Disadvantages

Weaker Compression than H.264

Theora produces larger files than H.264 at equivalent quality, using more bandwidth and storage.

No Safari Support

Apple browsers and devices do not support OGV natively, requiring a fallback format.

Limited Modern Tooling

Fewer editing and production tools support OGV compared to MP4 or WebM.

Superseded by WebM

WebM (VP8/VP9) offers better compression with the same royalty-free advantages and broader support.

When to Use It

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

Open Source Projects

Use OGV when distributing video in contexts where royalty-free formats are legally or philosophically required.

Wikipedia and Wikimedia

The required format for uploading videos to Wikimedia Commons and embedding in Wikipedia articles.

Linux Desktop Applications

OGV is well supported in Linux media applications and is appropriate for desktop open-source video.

Web Video Fallback

Provide OGV as an additional source alongside WebM for older Firefox-only environments.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between OGV and OGG?

OGG is the general container format used for all Xiph media. OGV is the extension specifically indicating a video stream inside an Ogg container. Audio-only Ogg files typically use the .ogg or .oga extension.

Does OGV work in all browsers?

OGV works natively in Firefox, Chrome, and Opera but not in Safari or Internet Explorer. For universal browser support, use MP4 (H.264) or WebM alongside OGV.

Is OGV better than WebM?

WebM generally offers better compression than OGV while retaining the royalty-free status. For new projects, WebM is preferred over OGV.

Can I play OGV on Windows?

Windows Media Player does not support OGV, but VLC Media Player, MPC-HC, and most third-party media players play OGV files without issue.

How do I convert OGV to MP4?

Use our free converter to convert OGV files to MP4, WebM, or any other modern format for broader device and browser compatibility.