H.265 (HEVC - High Efficiency Video Coding) is the successor to H.264, providing approximately 50% better compression efficiency. It is the modern standard for 4K, HDR, and high-framerate video delivery.
H.265 Video Codec (HEVC)
H.265, formally known as High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC), is the modern successor to H.264, standardized in 2013. It provides approximately 50% better compression efficiency, making it essential for 4K, HDR, and high-framerate video delivery while maintaining or improving visual quality.
Development and Standardization
H.265 evolution reflects advancing technology needs:
- Standardization: ITU-T VCEG and ISO/IEC MPEG joint effort (2013)
- Motivation: Enable UHD and HDR video with manageable bitrates
- Advancement: ~50% compression improvement over H.264
- Adoption: Rapidly becoming primary standard for modern delivery
Technical Improvements Over H.264
Enhanced Compression Architecture:
- Larger Block Sizes: 64x64 coding units (vs. 16x16 for H.264)
- Better Prediction: More sophisticated intra/inter prediction
- Improved Entropy Coding: CABAC-only (no CAVLC option)
- Adaptive Loop Filtering: Context-based filtering refinement
- Sample Adaptive Offset (SAO): Advanced post-processing
Practical Result:
- Same quality as H.264 at half the bitrate
- Superior quality at equivalent bitrates
- Better handling of complex content
- Improved visual quality in low-bitrate scenarios
Profiles and Tiers
H.265 defines comprehensive profiles for different applications:
Main Profiles:
- Main: 8-bit standard definition content
- Main 10: 10-bit color depth for HDR
- Main 4:2:2 10: 4:2:2 chroma sampling for professional
- Main 4:4:4 10: Full 4:4:4 sampling for mastering
Tiers and Levels (similar to H.264):
- Level 5.2: 8192x4320@60fps
- Higher levels support 8K and beyond
- Tier distinction (main vs. high) affects bitrate limits
Bitrate Performance
H.265 efficiency enables:
Typical Bitrates:
- 1080p/24fps: 2-4 Mbps (H.264: 5-8 Mbps)
- 4K/24fps: 8-12 Mbps (H.264: 15-25 Mbps)
- 4K/60fps: 15-25 Mbps (H.264: 25-50 Mbps)
- 4K HDR/24fps: 12-20 Mbps with Main 10 profile
Advantage for Delivery:
- Streaming services deliver 4K more efficiently
- Broadcast can add HDR without bitrate increase
- Archival requires smaller storage footprint
- Distribution bandwidth requirements reduced
HDR and Wide Color Gamut Support
H.265 natively supports modern color technologies:
HDR Standards:
- Rec.2020: Wide color gamut specification
- PQ (Perceptual Quantizer): HDR transfer function (Rec.2084)
- HLG (Hybrid Log-Gamma): Broadcast HDR alternative
- Metadata: HDMI, DCI, and frame-based HDR signaling
Main 10 Profile:
- 10-bit color depth essential for HDR
- Maintains detail in highlights and shadows
- Enables next-generation display technology
- Professional standard for HDR mastering
Industrial Applications
Streaming Platforms:
- Netflix (primary 4K codec)
- Amazon Prime Video
- YouTube (UHD content)
- Apple TV+
Broadcast:
- Ultra HD television transmission
- NextGen TV (ATSC 3.0)
- 8K broadcasting trials
- HDR broadcast delivery
Digital Cinema:
- 4K DCP distribution
- Archive masters
- Festival distribution
- Theatrical special format delivery
Professional/Archival:
- Mastering format for 4K content
- Long-term archive preservation
- Broadcast quality assurance
- Professional deliverables
Hardware Support
H.265 increasingly enjoys hardware acceleration:
Encoding Hardware:
- NVIDIA NVENC (second-generation and newer)
- Intel Quick Sync (7th generation and newer)
- AMD VCE
- Apple ProRes (GPU acceleration)
Decoding Hardware:
- Modern smartphone SoCs
- Television chipsets
- Consumer devices increasingly standard
- Streaming devices widely support
H.265 vs. Alternatives
| Codec | Efficiency | HDR Support | Adoption |
|---|---|---|---|
| H.264 | Baseline | Limited | Universal |
| H.265 | 50% better | Excellent | Growing |
| VP9 | 35% better | Good | Growing |
| AV1 | 55% better | Excellent | Emerging |
Future of H.265
H.265 remains central to modern video delivery and remains the primary standard for 4K and HDR content across streaming, broadcast, and archive applications.