Transcribe your lectures, study from complete notes
Record the lecture on your phone, upload it and get much more than a transcript: a document organized by topic, with a summary and a glossary of course terminology. In class you listen and understand, instead of typing frantically and hoping you don't miss the key point.
How it works — in 3 steps.
Record and upload the lecture
Your phone's voice recorder in the lecture hall or the recorded class downloaded from your university's platform is all you need. Verlio accepts audio and video of any length, two-hour marathons included.
Attach slides or course materials
The context document makes a real difference for studying: with the professor's slides attached, formulas, cited authors and the course's specialist terminology come out spelled correctly.
Get structured notes
Besides the full text, the Structured Document organizes the lecture into sections by topic, with an opening summary and a closing glossary. Export it to Word or PDF and merge it with your own notes.
From recording to notes: how your study method changes
Students who take notes by typing retain little: their attention goes to typing speed, not to the professor's reasoning. Delegating the transcription lets you actually follow the lecture and ask questions, knowing every word will end up in writing anyway.
At revision time the advantage multiplies: the summary gives you the map of the lecture, the topic sections take you straight to the point you didn't get, and the full transcript preserves the exact definitions — the ones you have to reproduce precisely in the exam.
How much does it cost to transcribe a semester of lectures?
The system runs on credits: 1 credit equals 30 minutes of recording and packs start at €5. A two-hour lecture costs 4 credits, and there's no monthly subscription to cancel at the end of the semester: you buy only what you use, when you have lectures to transcribe.
Before spending anything you can see for yourself: every file under 10 minutes is free, and at signup you receive 1 hour of free transcription, no card required. Enough to test it on a real lecture from your own course.
Course in a foreign language, notes in yours
More and more degree programs are taught in a second language, and following a technical lecture in one is demanding enough. Verlio can transcribe the foreign-language audio and deliver the document directly in your language — or any of the more than 35 supported.
The same goes for exchange students: a lecture in Spanish or German becomes a document in your own language, with course terminology preserved thanks to the handouts attached as context.
Frequently asked questions.
Am I allowed to record lectures at university?
For personal study it's generally permitted, but some universities and professors have their own rules: the right move is to ask the professor at the start of the course. The recording should not be shared or published.
Is my phone's microphone good enough in a large lecture hall?
Yes, if you sit in the front rows or if the professor uses the room's sound system. The closer and clearer the source, the more accurate the transcript.
Does it recognize the formulas and technical terms of my course?
Attach slides or handouts as a context document and the AI adopts the exact terminology of the course: theorem names, authors, chemical compounds, legal provisions.
Does it work with recorded classes from my university's platform?
Yes: download the video file and upload it as-is, no conversion needed. The same applies to remote classes that were recorded.
How much does a two-hour lecture cost?
4 credits, because each credit covers 30 minutes. With the basic €5 pack you can transcribe several full lectures.
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Try it on your own file, right now.
Upload an audio or video file, choose the document language and download the result as Word or PDF. Your first hour is free and we never ask for a card.