Why Convert Home Movies to Digital?
Somewhere in your house — probably in a box in the loft, the back of a wardrobe, or a relative's garage — there are home movies nobody has watched in years. They might be on VHS tapes, camcorder cassettes, or old cine film reels. And they're slowly dying.

Magnetic tapes lose signal quality every year. Cine film becomes brittle and fades. The devices that play them are disappearing. If you don't convert those home movies to digital, you'll eventually lose them forever.
Here's a practical guide to every way you can do it in 2026.

Option 1: Use a Professional Conversion Service
Best for: Irreplaceable family memories, large collections, getting the best possible quality
This is the most reliable option and the one we'd recommend for anything you genuinely care about. A professional service uses broadcast-grade equipment that extracts far more detail from your tapes and film than any consumer device can.
Here's what a good service should include:
- Professional playback equipment — broadcast decks with time base correctors, not consumer VCRs
- Digital restoration — colour correction, image stabilisation, noise reduction
- Multiple format support — VHS, Hi8, MiniDV, Super 8, 8mm, 16mm, and more
- Convenient logistics — free collection from your door and return delivery
- Digital delivery — files you can watch on any device, share online, and back up
At EachMoment, professional conversion starts from £10 per item. The process is simple:
- Order a Memory Box — it arrives with prepaid DPD packaging
- Pack your tapes or film reels into the box
- Book a free DPD collection from your door
- Receive your digital files in about 2 weeks, plus a private cloud album to share with family
Over 1,500 families have used the service with an average rating of 4.7 out of 5.
Option 2: DIY With a USB Capture Device
Best for: Casual recordings you'd like to have digitally but wouldn't be devastated to lose
USB video capture devices cost £10–£30 and plug into your computer. You connect your VCR or camcorder's analogue output to the device, then use software to record the footage as a digital file.
What you need:
- A working VCR or camcorder that plays your tapes
- A USB capture device (e.g., Elgato Video Capture, or budget alternatives on Amazon)
- A computer with video capture software (often included with the device)
- RCA or SCART cables to connect the player to the capture device
- Patience — the capture happens in real-time (a 2-hour tape takes 2 hours)
Limitations:
- Quality is limited by your playback device — consumer VCRs produce noticeably worse output than professional decks
- No restoration — tracking issues, colour drift, and noise are captured as-is
- Audio sync problems are common with cheap capture devices
- You need a working player for each format — VHS needs a VCR, Hi8 needs a Hi8 camcorder, etc.
- Cine film can't be captured this way at all
Option 3: Use a DVD Recorder
Best for: People who want DVDs rather than digital files, and already own a DVD recorder
If you have a DVD recorder (many were sold in the mid-2000s), you can connect your VCR to it and record directly to DVD. This was the go-to method 15 years ago.
The problem: DVD recorders are no longer manufactured. DVD quality is limited to 720x576 pixels. And DVDs themselves are becoming obsolete — modern laptops often don't have DVD drives. You'd be converting from one dying format to another.
If you do use this method, make sure to also rip the DVD to digital files (MP4) using free software like HandBrake, so you have a future-proof copy.

Option 4: Scan Cine Film Yourself
Best for: Hobbyists with budget and patience
If your home movies are on 8mm, Super 8, or 16mm cine film, you can't play them through a VCR. Options include:
- Film scanning devices — machines like the Wolverine or Kodak Reels scanners (£200–£500) let you feed film through frame by frame. Quality is decent for the price, but slow
- Projector + camera method — project the film onto a screen and record it with a modern camera. Budget-friendly but results are mediocre (flicker, uneven brightness, resolution loss)
For precious cine film — especially 16mm — professional frame-by-frame scanning produces dramatically better results. Each frame is individually captured at high resolution with colour correction.
What Format Are Your Home Movies On?
Not sure what you're dealing with? Here's a quick identification guide:
| Format | What It Looks Like | Common Era |
|---|---|---|
| VHS | Large cassette, about the size of a paperback book | 1980s–2000s |
| VHS-C | Compact VHS cassette, about palm-sized | Late 1980s–1990s |
| Hi8 / Video8 | Small cassette, similar size to audio cassette | 1990s |
| MiniDV | Tiny cassette, smaller than a matchbox | Late 1990s–2000s |
| Super 8 / 8mm Film | Small film reel, typically 3" or 5" diameter | 1960s–1980s |
| 16mm Film | Larger film reel, wider tape | 1930s–1970s |
| Betamax | Similar to VHS but slightly smaller, different slot shape | 1980s |
EachMoment converts all of these formats and more.

Tips for Getting the Best Results
Whether you go DIY or professional, these tips will help:
- Don't rewind and fast-forward repeatedly — every pass stresses old tape. If a tape hasn't been played in years, handle it gently
- Store tapes upright — like books on a shelf, not stacked flat. This prevents the tape from sagging inside the cassette
- Keep them cool and dry — avoid attics (too hot in summer), garages (too damp), and anywhere with direct sunlight
- Don't try to fix a chewed tape yourself — if a tape has been eaten by a VCR, a professional can often recover it. DIY attempts usually make it worse
- Label everything — note what's on each tape before sending or converting. You'll thank yourself later when organising files
How Much Does It Cost?
Here's a realistic cost comparison:
| Method | Upfront Cost | Per-Tape Cost | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|
| Professional service | £0 (free collection) | From £10 | Excellent — broadcast equipment + restoration |
| USB capture device | £15–£30 | Free (but 1:1 time) | Fair — limited by consumer VCR quality |
| DVD recorder | £50–£100 (used) | £1 per disc | Fair — DVD resolution only |
| Cine film scanner | £200–£500 | Free (very slow) | Good — but manual and time-consuming |
For most people, the professional route is the best value — especially when you factor in the time, equipment, and quality difference. A Memory Box from EachMoment holds up to 10 items, with prices from £10 per tape and free delivery both ways.
Don't Wait — Tapes Are Degrading Right Now
This isn't marketing urgency — it's physics. Magnetic tape degrades whether you play it or not. Cine film becomes brittle. The equipment to play them gets rarer every year. If you've been meaning to "get around to it" for years, now is the time.
The process takes about 2 minutes to order and 2 weeks to get your memories back — restored, digital, and ready to share with the whole family. Start here.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I convert home movies to digital?
You can digitise your old tapes using DIY methods like a USB capture card, or by sending them to a professional mail-in service. For a comprehensive guide on the best approach, read our full breakdown on how to convert VHS to digital.
How much does it cost to convert home movies to digital?
The cost varies depending on whether you choose a DIY USB dongle for around £15 or a professional transfer. Professional services typically charge between £10 and £25 per tape, which includes careful cleaning and studio-grade digitisation.
What is the best way to preserve home videos?
The safest way to preserve your memories is transferring the analogue footage to a digital format like MP4 files or a secure USB stick. For most families, a Memory Box is the easiest solution — send off your tapes and get digital files back.
Can I connect a VCR to my computer?
Yes, you can connect a VCR to your computer using a USB video capture card and recording software. However, this method is time-consuming as footage must be captured in real-time whilst you monitor for tracking errors.
Are HDMI converter boxes the same as capture devices?
No — HDMI converter boxes simply upscale the analogue signal so you can watch tapes on a modern TV, but they do not record the footage. If you want to permanently save your home movies, you need a USB capture device or a professional transfer service.