DIVX to MXF Converter

Convert DIVX to broadcast-grade MXF format online

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Settings

The codec to encode the video track. Codec "Without reencoding" copies the video stream from the input file into output without re-encoding if possible.
Set the video quality in a VBR mode. Choose "Custom" if you need to set a fixed bitrate (CBR).
Set an output video resolution by selecting one from the predefined set of the most popular resolutions or manually entering a custom resolution.

divx

DivX is a family of video codecs and a media container format developed by DivX, LLC. The project traces its roots to a hacked version of the Microsoft MPEG-4 v3 codec that circulated in the late 1990s, but the legitimate DivX codec launched in January 2001 as an open-source project called OpenDivX before transitioning to a proprietary commercial product. The codec is based on MPEG-4 Part 2 (ASP) compression and later versions incorporated H.264/AVC and HEVC support. DivX gained enormous popularity in the early 2000s for its ability to compress a full-length movie into a file small enough to fit on a single CD-ROM while maintaining watchable visual quality. This compression efficiency made DivX a defining format of the early internet era, when bandwidth and storage were scarce resources. The DivX Media Format (.divx) container adds features like interactive menus, chapters, subtitles, and alternate audio tracks, bringing DVD-like functionality to digital files. DivX certification became a common label on consumer electronics, with thousands of DVD players and other devices supporting DivX playback natively. The codec also pioneered quality-based variable bit rate encoding that allocates more data to complex scenes and less to static ones, resulting in consistent visual quality throughout a video.
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mxf

MXF (Material Exchange Format) is a professional media container standardized by the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) in 2004 under the SMPTE 377M specification. Designed for the broadcast and post-production industries, MXF provides a vendor-neutral wrapper for carrying video, audio, and rich descriptive metadata between different production systems and platforms. The format supports a wide range of professional codecs including MPEG-2, AVC-Intra, DNxHD, DNxHR, ProRes, and JPEG 2000, making it adaptable to various quality tiers from proxy editing to master-quality archive. An extensive metadata framework is one of the defining characteristics of MXF, carrying production information such as timecodes, clip names, descriptive markers, source references, and technical parameters within a structured Key-Length-Value (KLV) encoding scheme. This metadata travels with the content through the production chain, reducing the risk of information loss when files move between ingest, editing, graphics, playout, and archive systems. MXF files use an operational pattern system that defines different levels of complexity, from simple single-item packages (OP1a) to complex multi-item playlists. Major broadcast equipment manufacturers and file-based workflow systems universally support MXF, and it serves as the interchange format for standards like AS-02 and AS-11 used in broadcasting.
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Broadcast Standard

MXF is the industry-standard wrapper for professional broadcast. Converting DIVX to MXF makes your content ready for TV and post-production.

DIVX to MXF Simplified

Upload your DIVX video and get a broadcast-ready MXF file. The online tool manages the entire conversion without manual configuration.

Professional Settings

Control codec, resolution, and bitrate for the MXF output. Produce files that meet the specifications of your broadcast or editing system.

How to convert DIVX to MXF

1

Select or drag&drop DIVX video to convert it to the MXF format from your computer, iPhone or Android. Moreover, it is possible to choose it from your Google Drive or Dropbox account.

2

Now your video is uploaded and you can start the DIVX to MXF conversion. If it is needed, change the output format to one of the 37 video formats supported. After that, you can add more videos for batch conversion.

3

If you want, you can customize such settings as resolution, quality, aspect ratio and others by clicking the gear icon. Apply them to all the video files if necessary and click the button "Convert" to process.

4

Once your video is converted and edited, you can download it to your Mac, PC or another device. If necessary, save the file to your Dropbox or Google Drive account.

About formats

DivX is a family of video codecs and a media container format developed by DivX, LLC. The project traces its roots to a hacked version of the Microsoft MPEG-4 v3 codec that circulated in the late 1990s, but the legitimate DivX codec launched in January 2001 as an open-source project called OpenDivX before transitioning to a proprietary commercial product. The codec is based on MPEG-4 Part 2 (ASP) compression and later versions incorporated H.264/AVC and HEVC support. DivX gained enormous popularity in the early 2000s for its ability to compress a full-length movie into a file small enough to fit on a single CD-ROM while maintaining watchable visual quality. This compression efficiency made DivX a defining format of the early internet era, when bandwidth and storage were scarce resources. The DivX Media Format (.divx) container adds features like interactive menus, chapters, subtitles, and alternate audio tracks, bringing DVD-like functionality to digital files. DivX certification became a common label on consumer electronics, with thousands of DVD players and other devices supporting DivX playback natively. The codec also pioneered quality-based variable bit rate encoding that allocates more data to complex scenes and less to static ones, resulting in consistent visual quality throughout a video.
Developer: DivX, LLC
Initial release: January 15, 2001
MXF (Material Exchange Format) is a professional media container standardized by the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) in 2004 under the SMPTE 377M specification. Designed for the broadcast and post-production industries, MXF provides a vendor-neutral wrapper for carrying video, audio, and rich descriptive metadata between different production systems and platforms. The format supports a wide range of professional codecs including MPEG-2, AVC-Intra, DNxHD, DNxHR, ProRes, and JPEG 2000, making it adaptable to various quality tiers from proxy editing to master-quality archive. An extensive metadata framework is one of the defining characteristics of MXF, carrying production information such as timecodes, clip names, descriptive markers, source references, and technical parameters within a structured Key-Length-Value (KLV) encoding scheme. This metadata travels with the content through the production chain, reducing the risk of information loss when files move between ingest, editing, graphics, playout, and archive systems. MXF files use an operational pattern system that defines different levels of complexity, from simple single-item packages (OP1a) to complex multi-item playlists. Major broadcast equipment manufacturers and file-based workflow systems universally support MXF, and it serves as the interchange format for standards like AS-02 and AS-11 used in broadcasting.
Initial release: 2004

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DIVX to MXF?

MXF is the standard interchange format for professional broadcast and post-production. Converting DIVX to MXF integrates your content into these workflows.

What software reads MXF?

Avid Media Composer, Adobe Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, and broadcast playout systems all work natively with MXF containers.

Is MXF a high-quality format?

MXF is a container — it wraps professional codecs and metadata. The quality depends on encoding settings, which you control before conversion.

Can I include metadata?

MXF supports rich metadata for broadcast workflows. Basic metadata is handled during conversion based on the source DIVX file content.

Does conversion take long?

Processing time varies with file size and resolution. Our cloud servers handle MXF encoding efficiently for most standard-length videos.