Both AVI and MOV are video containers. The conversion typically re-encodes the video stream into a different codec rather than just renaming the file. This guide explains how to convert AVI to MOV with MOV.to — what the conversion really does, when it is the right call, and what to watch for at each step.
U beddel AVI ilaa MOV →Common reasons: trimming file size with a more efficient codec, fixing a compatibility issue on a phone or smart TV that does not play the source format, or merging multi-track content down to something simpler for upload.
The tradeoff is mostly about codec efficiency and compatibility. AVI brings widely playable by older media players; MOV brings native on every Mac; ProRes for high-bitrate editing workflows. A re-encode happens during conversion, so a fresh pass on the original always beats a chain of conversions.
Conversion choices that matter: target resolution, codec (MOV commonly uses h264_h265_prores), and bitrate or quality. A re-encode is usually unavoidable between containers with different default codec families.
Open the AVI to MOV tool. The page accepts files from your computer or by drag-and-drop.
Select your AVI file or drag it onto the upload area. AVI is typically used for legacy Windows video files from the DivX/XviD era.
MOV is a container; the codec inside drives quality and size. Defaults usually pick a sensible modern codec (h264_h265_prores). Adjust if you need a specific bitrate or resolution.
Conversion re-encodes the video stream. Long files take proportionally longer; the encoder reads the AVI once and writes the MOV in a single pass for typical settings.
Save the MOV. The output should play on every device in MOV's compatibility envelope (QuickTime, Final Cut, iMovie, Premiere, VLC).