Premiere Pro Import Failed — File Format Not Supported
Premiere Pro returns a handful of import errors on broken files, all conveying roughly the same thing: Premiere can't parse this file. Common phrasings:
- "The file has no audio or video streams."
- "Unsupported file format."
- "The file is damaged."
- "Codec not available." (less common, usually means the codec is unsupported rather than damaged.)
Premiere is stricter than most players. A file that opens fine in QuickTime, VLC, or even Resolve can fail to import in Premiere because Premiere expects a fully-conforming MP4 / MOV with consistent index, valid stream descriptions, and recognisable codec parameters.
What's actually happening
Three categories.
1. The file is structurally broken
MOOV missing, malformed, or truncated. Premiere's parser hits the inconsistency and gives up. This is real recovery territory — see MOOV not found, the document could not be opened, cannot find essential data.
If QuickTime also refuses the file, it's almost certainly category 1.
2. The file is fine but the codec isn't installed
Premiere doesn't ship every codec. Common gaps:
- Cineform — needs the Cineform codec separately on Windows (built-in on macOS via QuickTime, but check the version).
- DNxHR / DNxHD — needs Avid codecs installed for full support; recent Premiere versions handle these natively but older builds don't.
- AV1 — supported in current Premiere versions, but check yours.
- ProRes 4444 XQ — generally fine on macOS, sometimes flaky on Windows depending on the ProRes encoder/decoder version.
- Camera RAW formats (BRAW, R3D, ARRIRAW) — need the manufacturer's plugin.
If VLC or Resolve plays the file, but Premiere refuses to import it, this is category 2.
3. Container/codec mismatch from a previous "repair"
Some recovery tools produce a file with a container declaration that doesn't match the codec data, or with stream descriptions that contradict each other. Premiere treats this as malformed and refuses. Fix: re-mux through FFmpeg to clean up:
ffmpeg -i recovered_by_other_tool.mp4 -c copy cleaned.mov
If this works, you've discovered the previous recovery wrote inconsistent metadata. The cleaned file should import.
How to figure out which one
ffprobe -v error -show_streams broken.mp4
- Returns nothing or "moov atom not found" → category 1.
- Returns valid stream info but Premiere refuses → category 2 or 3.
For category 2 vs 3:
- File was straight off a camera → category 2 (codec gap on your install).
- File was processed through a recovery tool first → category 3 (re-mux usually fixes).
Test in DaVinci Resolve. If Resolve imports it, the file is structurally fine and your Premiere setup is the issue (category 2 or 3).
What to do
For category 1 — recover the file
See MOOV not found. A proper recovery produces a Premiere-ingestible file.
For category 2 — install the missing codec
- Cineform: GoPro Codec installer (free).
- DNx: install a recent Premiere or Avid Codecs LE.
- BRAW: Blackmagic RAW Player + Premiere plugin.
- R3D: REDCINE-X PRO + RED SDK for Premiere.
- ARRIRAW: ARRI Reference Tool.
Restart Premiere after install.
For category 3 — re-mux to clean metadata
ffmpeg -err_detect ignore_err -i previous_recovery.mp4 -c copy cleaned.mov
If -c copy doesn't fix it, try a transcode-pass (slower, but produces an unambiguous result):
ffmpeg -i previous_recovery.mp4 -c:v libx264 -crf 18 -c:a aac premiere_friendly.mov
The transcode loses one generation of quality but produces a file Premiere will import without complaint.
How our recovery handles Premiere-import cases
- Container reconstruction with strict-validity output. The rebuilt file is structurally consistent: stream descriptions match codec data, durations are computed correctly, chunk offsets are 64-bit when needed.
- Premiere is a target compatibility check. Files we recover are imported in Premiere as part of internal testing. If the recovery output doesn't import in Premiere, that's a regression we treat seriously.
- Codec preservation. We rebuild the container without re-encoding. Your H.264 / H.265 / ProRes data is preserved bit-for-bit; if Premiere supports the codec, it'll work.
What you do
- Upload the file.
- Free 5-second preview ~1 minute later. The preview is browser-safe (yuv420p H.264) and you can verify the recovery worked before paying.
- Full recovery output imports into Premiere directly.
FAQ
The file imports but media offlines after a few seconds in the timeline.
Likely an stco overflow on a > 4 GB file (cause #3 in cannot find essential data). Recovery rebuilds with co64 and the offline issue disappears.
Premiere imports but the import is super slow / hangs. Often a partial-MOOV scenario — Premiere has to scan the file to figure out what's there. A clean re-mux normalises this.
Premiere imports but reports "media pending" indefinitely.
Usually the codec is one Premiere has trouble with (RAW formats most often). Confirm the codec via ffprobe and install the manufacturer's plugin.
Same file imports fine in Resolve, fails in Premiere. Resolve's importer is more permissive. Re-mux to normalise the file metadata; Premiere will accept the result.
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