A little MP4-to-DVD transformer that is hard to ignore. Freemake Video Converter is a famous desktop app for Windows (Vista through 11). It can tackle MP4-DVD conversion and 500+ other video and audio formats. The software lets you cut, join, or rotate videos, and add subtitles in SRT, ASS, or SSA formats before burning.
It supports online videos, too. I used YouTube and Vimeo links, and Freemake imported and prepared them for DVD without extra downloads. The program can export projects as ISO files or DVD folders if you don’t have a blank disc on hand. DVD menus, chapter markers, aspect ratios, PAL/NTSC – all these settings are adjustable. I ran multiple batches of long videos, and it fit up to 40 hours onto one disc without errors.
Freemake also converts AVI, MPEG, WMV, MKV, and more to DVD. Users who often archive or back up video collections can safely rely on it. Hardware acceleration worked nicely in my tests, and even large HD files were processed without crashing. I found subtitle editing intuitive, and the interface stayed responsive during batch operations.
New releases are not frequent, so each one is hip and happening. The latest version 5.0.0.18 came live on October 17, 2025, after nearly three years of silence from developers. Great additions were made, like added support for files with AV1, VP9, and Opus codecs.
I ran a few 4K and HD clips, and the conversion speed improved noticeably. Stability feels better, and subtitle handling is snappier than before. If you use Freemake often, updating is worth it.
Use the instructions below to burn DVD from MP4 using Freemake:
- Visit the brand’s website to download the video converter.
- Add the MP4 files you want to burn to the disc and choose the DVD option.
- Before converting your files, set your burning parameters such as your menu type and aspect ratio.
- Insert a blank disc into your DVD drive and select Burn MP4 to DVD.