Migrate from murf to elevenlabs.
2 documentation-derived translation patterns — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
Move localization work from Murf Dub to ElevenLabs Dubbing. Re-upload the source video/audio (ElevenLabs accepts direct files up to 2 GB / 180 minutes, or YouTube/X/TikTok/Vimeo URLs) and pick target languages; use automatic Dubbing v2 for end-to-end translation and voice matching, or Dubbing Studio for timeline-based speaker/clip editing. Export to MP4 plus SRT captions to mirror Murf's dubbed-video output, and budget per ElevenLabs subscription credits instead of Murf Dub's per-credit pay-as-you-go.
- Warning: Billing model differs: Murf Dub is metered as standalone credits ($1/credit pay-as-you-go) whereas ElevenLabs dubbing draws from your plan's monthly character/credit allowance, so cost comparisons are not one-to-one.
- Warning: Language coverage differs: Murf advertises 40+ dubbing languages versus ElevenLabs' 90+, so a re-platform can widen reach but specific voice/language pairings should be re-tested before committing.
Re-create Murf voiceover scripts in ElevenLabs Text-to-Speech. Move the script text over and re-select a comparable voice from the ElevenLabs voice library, since exact Murf voices have no equivalent. Replace Murf's per-block pitch/speed/pause/emphasis controls with ElevenLabs voice settings (stability, similarity, style) and v3 inline audio tags for emotion and pacing. Set output to MP3 or PCM at the sample rate your downstream tooling expects, and regenerate any multilingual segments using an ElevenLabs multilingual model.
- Warning: Voices are not portable: Murf's 200+ voices and ElevenLabs' library are separate catalogs, so any consolidation requires re-casting and re-approving the voice, and audio will not sound identical.
- Warning: Delivery control models differ: Murf uses explicit pitch/speed/pause/emphasis knobs while ElevenLabs leans on stability/style sliders plus v3 audio tags, so fine-tuned Murf timing must be re-dialed by ear rather than copied.