The next big step for mobile video: AV1 successor is coming, with even more data savings
Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission. Learn more. The AV1 video codec has been around since 2018, and it offers better efficiency and higher quality than its predecessors. Platforms like YouTube and Netflix support AV1 playback, while the Pixel 10 phones
Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission. Learn more.
The AV1 video codec has been around since 2018, and it offers better efficiency and higher quality than its predecessors. Platforms like YouTube and Netflix support AV1 playback, while the Pixel 10 phones were the first to let you record videos in the format . However, a successor codec is official, and it has just reached a key milestone.
The Alliance for Open Media recently released the definitive AV2 codec specifications (h/t: Neowin ), bringing it a step closer to commercial adoption. So what should you expect from AV2 compared to AV1?
Weโve got varying claims regarding AV2โs efficiency compared to AV1. The alliance noted late last year that it saw gains of 28.6% and 32.6% in two separate metrics. Meanwhile, VLC project lead Jean-Baptiste Kempf suggests gains of roughly 25%, with larger gains seen in a few other tests.
Either way, this is great news if youโre streaming AV2 video on a compatible device. This means you should expect the same video quality for ~25 to ~32% less bandwidth than AV1, or significantly improved video quality for the same bandwidth as the current codec.
On the other hand, Kempf reports that AV2 playback is roughly five times more complex than AV1:
To that end, Kempf and the team are working on the dav2d software-based AV2 decoder. This succeeds the dav1d AV1 decoder currently used in VLC, Windows, Android, and numerous other platforms.
It might be a while before all major platforms and hardware makers adopt AV2, though. AV1 was first launched in 2018, with YouTube tentatively adopting it that same year. Netflix adopted the codec in 2020. On the hardware front, 2019โs MediaTek Dimensity 1000 was the first smartphone chip to support hardware-based AV1 decoding/playback. By contrast, 2022โs Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 was the first Snapdragon chip with this capability. Weโve also seen software-based AV1 decoding for devices without the requisite hardware, and Google made this mandatory with Android 14.

