The Audio Converter That Doesn't Suck

You know that moment when the podcast is M4A but your car only plays MP3? Or when the client sends a 500MB WAV file? Yeah, I fix those daily. This audio converter handles MP3, WAV, FLAC, whatever weird format you've got. No uploads to sketchy servers. Your audio converter headache? Consider it gone.

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Studio Quality Converter
30-Second Conversions

Audio File Converter

Convert your audio files to different formats using our browser-based audio converter powered by FFmpeg WebAssembly

Which Audio Converter Format Do You Actually Need?

For Music Listening

MP3 (320kbps)

This is what you want 99% of the time. Sounds great, works everywhere, doesn't eat your phone storage. Set this converter to 320kbps and forget it.

AAC

Apple's favorite child. Slightly better than MP3, but only Apple stuff really cares. Use this converter for iTunes/iPhone optimization.

For Audio Production

WAV

The raw deal. Zero compression, massive files, perfect quality. If you're editing in Pro Tools, this converter gives you the goods.

FLAC

For audio nerds who want perfect quality but reasonable file sizes. I use this converter for archiving vinyl rips.

For Special Uses

M4A

iPhone voice memos, iTunes purchases, Apple podcasts. This converter handles all the Apple-specific weirdness.

OGG

The rebel format. Great for games and websites. Spotify uses this internally. Our converter makes OGG files that actually play.

How This Audio Converter Works (Spoiler: It's Simple)

1

Select Your Audio File

Click the upload area or drag and drop your audio file. We support MP3, WAV, FLAC, M4A, and more.

2

Choose Output Format

Select your desired output format. MP3 for universal compatibility, FLAC for lossless quality.

3

Start Conversion

Click Convert and wait while your audio is processed locally in your browser.

4

Download Result

Once complete, click Download to save your converted audio file.

Audio Converter Questions I Get Daily

What audio files can this converter handle?

All the usual suspects: MP3, WAV, FLAC, M4A, AAC, OGG, even WMA from your old Windows days. Got some obscure format? Try it anyway. This audio converter surprised me with OPUS support last week.

What's the best format for music quality?

Depends what you're doing. Archiving your vinyl collection? FLAC converter all day. Everyday listening? MP3 at 320kbps sounds identical to most people. Recording a podcast? This audio converter makes WAV files for editing, then MP3 for distribution.

Can this converter rip audio from videos?

Yep. Feed it an MP4, MOV, whatever β€” the audio converter pulls out the soundtrack. I use this constantly for grabbing audio from YouTube downloads and client video presentations.

Does this audio converter destroy quality?

Not if you're smart about it. WAV to FLAC? Perfect copy. MP3 to MP3? That's like photocopying a photocopy β€” don't do it. This converter uses the best settings, but physics is physics. Pro tip: Always convert from your highest quality source.

How big can my audio files be?

Converted a 3-hour podcast (450MB) yesterday without breaking a sweat. The audio converter handles most stuff fine. Got a 10-hour audiobook? Maybe split it first. Your browser does the work, so if you've got the RAM, the converter's got the time.

Why Musicians & Podcasters Love This Audio Converter

True story: Last month, a client sent me 47 voice memos in M4A format. My editing software laughed at them. Ten minutes later, this audio converter had them all as WAVs, ready to edit. That's when I knew this converter was different.

Here's what I use this audio converter for daily: Band sends demos in FLAC? Converter makes them MP3 for the car. Podcast guest records in WAV? Audio converter shrinks it for Dropbox. Downloaded a DJ set but it's some weird format? This converter figures it out. No software installs, no sketchy uploads, no "convert 3 files then pay" nonsense.

The converter's actually smart about it too. Converting a music track? Automatically uses 320kbps MP3 (basically perfect). Voice recording? The audio converter picks settings that keep speech clear but files small. Archiving your dad's jazz collection? FLAC mode preserves every cymbal crash. It's like having an audio engineer who just handles it.