Your PC running Windows may have jewels in your DVD collection, but you need to make sure they play nice with a media center. With the right drive, and a little bit of savvy in the form of some free software (and no small amount of common sense), turning analog media like CDs and vinyl into high-quality digital is easier than before—not to mention more flexible.
What’s new is the combination of GPU-accelerated encoding and mature ripping tools that can present all of it, from an old classic when I was a child to footage shot on dad’s latest super-sharp smartphone.
- Don’t forget to collect your drive, software, and storage
- Modern hardware, speed and quality for faster encoding
- Format choices for broad compatibility when you travel
- The law and copy protection: what is allowed and not
- Organize and stream your library across all devices
- A practical Windows PC workflow for digitizing discs
- Why this matters now for your movies and home videos

The upshot: a more direct route to a searchable, streamable library playing out on your phones, TVs, and game consoles without the plastic.
Don’t forget to collect your drive, software, and storage
First, you will need a DVD drive. If you don’t have one built into your desktop or laptop, a USB-powered external drive is cheap and plug-and-play on Windows. Next, pick software. The usual suspects include open-source HandBrake for transcoding (combined with read-happy utilities that can grab disc data) and commercial suites that offer ripping, conversion, and maybe even a dabble in basic editing.
Finally, plan for storage. A common 2-hour DVD title converted to H.264 at a fairly high bitrate can range between 1GB and 3GB, depending on your desired quality level as well as if you retain multichannel audio. Dozens of films fit on a small external SSD, while if you’re a serious collector something like a NAS or large HDD probably makes sense.
Modern hardware, speed and quality for faster encoding
Windows PCs today can convert video very quickly, thanks to hardware transcoders. Nvidia’s NVENC, Intel Quick Sync Video, and AMD’s AMF take encoding off your CPU to eliminate those long waits for coffee breaks. You can avoid spending thirty minutes transcoding a two-hour DVD in almost every real-world example with hardware acceleration; YMMV depending on your settings and GPU.
Codec choice matters. H.264 should still be everyone’s darling, absolutely universal for maximum compatibility at reasonable quality and suitable file size, while H.265 (HEVC) can also put out similarly good quality video at 30–50% the size in most cases, particularly once you get to higher resolutions. AV1 may be future-proofed for efficiency, but device compatibility remains a work in progress. For older TVs or set-top boxes, H.264 presets are likely OK to use.
Format choices for broad compatibility when you travel
To be (most) compatible, encode to MP4 with H.264 video and AAC audio. If you wish to keep surround mixes, just leave AC3 or transcode to AAC 5.1 and test on your player. You can either burn in subtitles, pass through as soft subtitles, or extract them as separate (e.g., SRT) files for a media server that supports this format.
Presets help users avoid guesswork. Quality-targeted settings such as HandBrake’s Constant Quality mode or device-specific presets for iPhone, Android, Roku, and PlayStation produce reliable results. Begin with a midrange quality level, sample a few scenes, and adjust before running the batch across your entire library.
The law and copy protection: what is allowed and not
DVDs are commonly released with region-based coding that regards copyright laws. The laws differ by country, and in the United States, it is illegal to circumvent encryption on commercial discs under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The Library of Congress’s Copyright Office does allow exemptions for limited use cases, though personal backup copies of copyrighted works are generally prohibited in the eyes of a large number of countries.

Your safest road is to digitize stuff that you own the rights to copy, like your unprotected home movies, or check local law before doing anything with commercial media. When in doubt, play it safe and stick to discs that you can legally convert.
Organize and stream your library across all devices
Half the experience is good organization. Get your naming just right (Movie Name Year.ext), add metadata in the form of embedded or attached artwork, and maintain uniformity regarding art. Media servers like Plex and Kodi automatically scrape metadata information, including posters and cast details, and keep track of which episodes or songs you’re watching—all across multiple devices.
If future-proofing is a concern, then consider creating metadata files during conversion and separate subtitle storage. This makes it easier to replace players later without re-encoding your videos.
A practical Windows PC workflow for digitizing discs
On Windows, you would commonly demux to a raw format and transcode as above. Select H.264 as the universal playback format, go modest with the quality to save time, and hardware encode if you can to make it even snappier: only one stereo track, plus a 5.1 track if your setup supports it. (If you’ve already converted your library, test on a TV, tablet, and phone before making the final delete.)
For home movies: trim the heads and tails, rotate (if necessary), and normalize audio. Most consumer tools offer simple editing commands to crop away black bars, adjust brightness and contrast, or throw in some chapter markers for navigation.
Why this matters now for your movies and home videos
Physical media is in decline, but not dead. Even as the proliferation of streaming subscriptions explodes, industry groups like the Digital Entertainment Group have reported that disc sales remain in double-digit free fall. The Motion Picture Association’s latest research demonstrates that home and mobile entertainment spending is at historic highs, but access to catalog on streaming can be spotty and shift frequently.
Digitizing the discs you actually own gives you peace of mind and control: no buffering, no titles disappearing because licensing arrangements changed, playback on your terms. A Windows PC and some rich workflow can turn your shelves into a fast, searchable depository that exists anywhere you do.
Learning from: Digital Entertainment Group, Motion Picture Association, Library of Congress Copyright Office, HandBrake Project documentation, Plex and Kodi user guidance.
