You downloaded a WAV that is too big to email, or an M4A that your old player refuses to open, or an OGG that one stubborn app will not touch. Almost every audio headache like this is a format mismatch, and the fix is to convert the file to something the target understands, usually MP3.
The short version: drop the file in, choose the output format, and download. The audio converter does it on your device, so there is no upload wait and the file stays with you.
How do I convert an audio file?
Add the file, pick the format you want, and download the converted version. There is nothing to set up beyond choosing the target.
- Add a file. Drop in almost any common audio file, including MP3, WAV, OGG, M4A and more.
- Pick the output. Choose MP3, WAV, OGG or M4A.
- Convert and download. The conversion runs locally and the new file downloads when it is ready.
Which format should you pick?
The right output depends entirely on where the audio is going. Here is what each is good for:
| Format | Best for | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|
| MP3 | Sharing, playing anywhere, email, phones | Lossy, but tiny and universally supported |
| WAV | Editing, archiving, feeding into other tools | Lossless and perfect, but large files |
| M4A | Apple devices, modern apps | Lossy; great quality for the size, less universal |
| OGG | Open-source apps, game audio, web | Lossy; efficient, but not every player reads it |
When in doubt, MP3 is the safe default. Everything plays it, the files are small, and the quality at a decent bitrate is fine for listening. Reach for WAV only when you need a perfect copy, typically because the file is going into another editor.
The one thing to know about quality
Lossy formats (MP3, OGG, M4A) throw away some audio data to shrink the file. You usually cannot hear it, but it adds up. If you convert an MP3 to OGG and later back to MP3, each step compounds the loss, and eventually it becomes audible.
The rule that keeps you out of trouble:
- Converting to WAV never loses quality, because WAV stores the audio uncompressed.
- Converting between lossy formats loses a little each time, so avoid round-tripping.
- If you plan to edit the file afterward, convert to WAV first, edit, then export to your final lossy format once at the end.
That way you compress only once, at the finish line, rather than degrading the file with every step.
A common real job: shrinking a WAV
Recording apps and field recorders often save uncompressed WAV, which sounds perfect but is enormous, far too big to email or upload to most platforms. Convert it to MP3 and the file shrinks dramatically while staying perfectly listenable. This is the most common reason people convert audio, and it takes one pass: drop the WAV in, choose MP3, download.
Why the file never leaves your device
The conversion happens on your own machine. Your file is read locally, converted in the browser, and saved back to your computer, with nothing uploaded. That matters for two reasons. Privacy: a confidential recording stays with you. And freedom from limits: there is no upload-size cap, so a long, high-quality file converts the same as a short clip, with no email wall and no per-file paywall.
The trade-off is that speed depends on your computer rather than a server, so a very long file takes a little time. For most files it is seconds.
Once you know the format you need, open the audio converter. If the audio you want is currently locked inside a video file, the extract audio tool pulls it out as MP3 or WAV first.