How to Use MakeMKV to Rip DVDs and Blu-rays QuicklyRipping DVDs and Blu-rays with MakeMKV is one of the fastest and simplest ways to convert physical discs into high-quality MKV files you can store, stream, or archive. This guide walks you step-by-step through installing MakeMKV, preparing your system, ripping discs efficiently, and optimizing workflow for speed and reliability.
What MakeMKV is and why use it
MakeMKV is a straightforward disc-ripping application that extracts video, audio, and subtitle streams from DVDs and Blu-ray discs into the MKV container without re-encoding. Because it doesn’t transcode the streams, MakeMKV preserves original quality and rips much faster than tools that encode video.
Key benefits
- Lossless extraction of original streams (no re-encoding).
- Fast because it copies rather than transcodes.
- Preserves multiple audio tracks and subtitles.
- Supports DVDs, Blu-rays, and some UHD discs (with appropriate support).
- Cross-platform: Windows, macOS, Linux.
Before you start: requirements and prep
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Hardware
- A good optical drive: Blu-ray drives for Blu-ray discs; most DVD drives can handle DVDs.
- Fast computer and storage: ripping Blu-rays produces large files (20–50+ GB). Use an SSD or fast HDD for working storage.
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Software
- Download and install MakeMKV from the official website. The beta is free for many features; a license is available for continued use.
- Ensure your OS has up-to-date drivers for your optical drive.
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Legal considerations
- Verify local laws about ripping discs you own; laws vary by country. This guide assumes you are ripping discs you legally own for personal backup or playback.
Installation and initial setup
- Download MakeMKV for your platform from the official site and install it.
- Launch MakeMKV. On first run you may need to allow drive access and accept prompts.
- If ripping Blu-rays, make sure your drive appears and that MakeMKV can read the disc—some encrypted discs may need updated MakeMKV versions or additional steps.
Step-by-step: ripping a DVD quickly
- Insert the DVD into your optical drive and wait for it to spin up.
- Open MakeMKV and click the big drive icon to open the disc. MakeMKV will scan the disc; this takes a minute or two.
- After scanning, MakeMKV shows a list of titles (main feature, extras, etc.). The main movie is usually the largest title by size/duration.
- Select only the title(s) you want to rip to save time and space. Deselect extras you don’t need.
- Expand the title and deselect any unnecessary audio or subtitle tracks (keeping those you want).
- Choose an output folder on a fast drive. Click the folder icon to change location.
- Click the “Make MKV” button. The program will extract streams and save an MKV file. Because MakeMKV does not re-encode, it usually proceeds at near-disc-read speed — typically several hundred MB/s limited by the drive and disc.
Tips to speed up DVD rips:
- Rip only the main title.
- Use a USB 3.0 or internal SATA drive if possible.
- Close other heavy I/O programs.
- Ensure the disc is clean and not scratched.
Step-by-step: ripping a Blu-ray quickly
Blu-rays are larger and more often encrypted, but MakeMKV handles many commercial discs.
- Insert the Blu-ray and open MakeMKV.
- Click the drive icon to scan the disc. Blu-ray scans and decryption checks may take longer than DVDs.
- Identify the main feature (usually the longest title). Select only the required title(s).
- Choose which audio and subtitle tracks to keep. Consider disabling extremely large lossless audio if you need to save space (but note this reduces fidelity).
- Choose an output folder with plenty of free space.
- Click “Make MKV” and wait. Ripping a Blu-ray will take longer than a DVD and produce larger files; typical durations vary by drive and disc condition.
Speed tips for Blu-ray:
- Use a high-quality internal or USB 3.0 Blu-ray drive.
- Keep only necessary tracks selected (especially if disc uses multiple lossless audio tracks).
- Update MakeMKV regularly — compatibility and speed with new discs improve over time.
- If you’ll encode later with HandBrake, you can rip only the main title with MakeMKV and then batch-encode separately.
Managing large MKV files and storage
- Expect Blu-ray MKV files to be 20–50+ GB depending on video length and audio tracks. DVDs are typically 1–8 GB.
- Consider external HDDs or NAS for storage. Use a fast internal SSD for temporary working files.
- If you need smaller files, rip with MakeMKV (to preserve quality) then transcode with HandBrake or ffmpeg to H.264/H.265 and smaller audio codecs. This adds processing time but reduces storage needs.
Example quick workflow:
- Use MakeMKV to rip main title only.
- Batch transcode with HandBrake to H.265 (select reasonable CRF like 20–23) while keeping desired subtitles.
Advanced tips and common issues
- If MakeMKV fails to read a disc, try cleaning the disc, using a different drive, or updating MakeMKV to latest beta.
- For region-locked DVDs, ensure the drive’s region is set appropriately (or use drives that support multiple regions).
- If you need chaptered files, MakeMKV preserves chapters inside MKV containers.
- For UHD/Blu-ray with AACS 2.0 or new protections, MakeMKV may require updates or additional keys—check official support notes for specific discs.
- Automate repetitive rips with scripts: MakeMKV provides a command-line interface (mkvcon) on some platforms for automation.
Quick troubleshooting checklist
- Disc not detected: check connections, try another drive.
- Ripping stalls: clean disc; try lower USB port speed or a direct internal connection.
- Files missing audio/subtitles: expand title in MakeMKV and ensure tracks are selected before ripping.
- Very slow rip speed: check drive health, use USB 3.0 or SATA, close other disk-heavy apps.
Summary
MakeMKV is the fastest way to create lossless MKV backups of DVDs and Blu-rays because it copies original streams without re-encoding. For quick rips: select only the main title and necessary tracks, use a fast drive and storage, keep MakeMKV updated, and transcode later only if you need smaller files.
Quick reference: - DVDs: small, fast — expect 1–8 GB. - Blu-rays: large — expect 20–50+ GB. - Speed factors: drive type, USB/SATA connection, disc condition, selected tracks.
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