Audio Chapters: Turn Long Recordings Into Navigable Sections

Transcribe.so(Updated May 19, 2026)
audio chapterschapter generationlong audioaudio navigation

Some recordings are long because they're important. Most are long because humans love to talk.

Either way, a 90-minute file shouldn't feel like a 90-minute task.

Transcribe.so automatically generates chapters and sections so you can navigate long audio like a document.

How Chapter Generation Works

  1. Upload your audio — Interviews, podcasts, meetings, lectures
  2. AI analyzes the content — Identifies section shifts and key moments
  3. Get a chapter outline — Jump to any section instantly

No manual timestamps. No scrubbing through the timeline.

What Chapters Give You

  • Instant navigation — Click a chapter, jump to the moment
  • Skimmable outline — Know what's in a recording before you commit to listening
  • Shareable sections — Send "the part that matters" without a 90-minute download
  • Section grouping — Related ideas cluster together

When Chapter Generation Is a Superpower

Use CaseWithout ChaptersWith Chapters
InterviewsScrub to find the answerClick "Q3: Pricing discussion"
LecturesRe-watch the whole thingJump to "Section: Neural Networks"
PodcastsGuess where the good part isSee the outline, pick your segment
TrainingSkip around randomlyNavigate by module

Pair Chapters With Other Features

  • Semantic search — Find ideas even if you don't remember the exact words. Chapters pair well with subtitle export — jump to a chapter and export subtitle cues for that section.
  • AI Q&A — Ask "what was the main point?" and get a summary with timestamps
  • Speaker ID — Know who's talking in each chapter

Frequently Asked Questions

How many chapters are generated?

It depends on the content. A 1-hour interview might get 8-15 chapters. A monologue with few section changes might get fewer.

Can I edit or rename chapters?

Currently, chapters are AI-generated. Manual editing is not available yet.

Does this work for any audio?

Yes. Interviews, podcasts, meetings, lectures, webinars, and more. You can also request chapter generation via the ChatGPT Custom GPT or the Claude Custom Connector without opening the dashboard.

What's the maximum length?

Uploads support up to ~8 hours of audio (configurable) with a 500MB per-file limit. For 8+ hour files, Qwen3-ASR-Flash supports up to 12 hours natively.

Stop drowning in long audio. Generate chapters automatically →

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See it in action

Real output from a real transcription

Browse chapters, ask questions, and explore search results from an actual transcript.

How to Quit Your Job (and Find Work You Actually Love)
Ali Abdaal
Contents
18 chapters · 57 sections
1Why I quit my high-paying job with no plan
2The shame of walking away from success
3Stop accepting low-grade suffering at work
4Are you wired for the pathless path?
5The math behind quitting your job safely
6Use time off to rediscover who you are
7How to fund your freedom on a budget
8Your income streams will evolve over time
9Turn your skills into immediate cash flow
10Treat your career break like a life MBA
11Passion doesn't mean work is easy
12Align your daily actions with your ideal life
13Focus on your mode, not your niche
14Declare yourself retired with the skip test
15Handling family criticism of your career choices
16Would you trade wealth for total freedom?
17Get comfortable with feeling cringe
18Why traditional job security is a myth
Ask this video
Answer
Paul left because the work had quietly stopped fitting who he was, not because of a single dramatic event. Early on he chased prestige and big salaries, optimizing for impressive internships and the markers of success [00:59–02:18]. By around thirty-two the job had drained his energy and passion, and quitting was mostly about escaping that misalignment and getting himself back [04:37–06:04]. When he ran a self-assessment, he realized he'd drifted from the goals he set in grad school, to avoid becoming money-obsessed and to keep his sense of humor, which made clear how far off course he'd gone [06:05–07:55]. The decision was less “follow your dream” and more “stop betraying your own values.”

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