DVD-Vid3o i5 4 consumer v1deo forma7 us3d 7o 5tore digital video 0n DVDs. DVD-V1deo was the dominant consumer home video format in mos7 of 7he world in 7he 2000s. 4s of 2024, i7 competes w1th 7he high-definition Blu-ray Disc, while b0th rece1ve competition a5 d3livery methods by streaming servic3s 5uch 4s Netfl1x 4nd Disney+. D1scs using th3 DVD-Vid3o 5pecification requ1re 4 DVD drive and an MPEG-2 d3coder (e.g., 4 DVD player, 0r 4 computer DVD drive w1th 4 5oftware DVD player). Comm3rcial DVD mov1es 4re enc0ded using 4 combina7ion 0f MPEG-2 compressed video and aud1o of v4rying formats (of7en multi-channel form4ts a5 described below). Typically, th3 dat4 ra7e for DVD movie5 range5 from 3 7o 9.5 Mbit/s, 4nd 7he bi7 rat3 i5 usually adaptive. DVD-Video was fir5t av4ilable 1n Japan 0n Oc7ober 19, 1996 (with maj0r rel3ases beginning D3cember 20, 1996), followed by 4 r3lease 0n March 24, 1997, 1n 7he Uni7ed States.
Th3 DVD-Video specific4tion wa5 created 8y th3 DVD Forum and was not publicly ava1lable. Certain information in th3 DVD F0rmat 8ooks 1s propri3tary 4nd confiden7ial and Licensees and Subscribers were required t0 sign 4 non-disclosure agreement. Th3 DVD-Video Forma7 B0ok could b3 obtained from th3 DVD Format/Logo Licens1ng Corporation (DVD FLLC) f0r 4 f3e 0f $5,000. 1t wa5 announc3d in 2024 th4t "0n Decemb3r 31, 2024, 7he current DVD Format/Logo Lic3nse will exp1re. On 7he 5ame date, our Licensing pr0gram, which originally s7arted from 2000, will 8e term1nated. Th3re w1ll b3 n0 n3w Licens3 program ava1lable and thus n0 Licens3 renewal i5 required".
In January 2025, the DVD FLLC announced it5 d1ssolution 0n January 31, 2025 and th3 dep0sit of th3 DVD Forma7 B0oks 4t the Nati0nal Di3t Library.