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Audio Converter

Convert AAC, AIFF, FLAC, M4A, MP3, OGG, WAV, and WMA audio online with bitrate, sample rate, trim, and batch ZIP options.

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What is Audio Converter

Written by Giorgos Kostas. Last reviewed:

Audio Converter converts common music, voice, podcast, and sound-effect files between MP3, WAV, M4A, FLAC, AAC, OGG, AIFF, and WMA formats.

Audio Converter runs through FFmpeg with server-side file limits, temporary workspaces, and batch ZIP output for small groups of files.

Why use it

  • Prepare audio for players, websites, editors, podcast workflows, or archive cleanup without installing a desktop converter.
  • Control bitrate, sample rate, channels, trimming, volume, and loudness normalization before downloading the result.
  • Convert up to five files in one job while keeping uploaded and generated files disposable after the request.

Features

  • FFmpeg-backed audio conversion for common web, editing, and archive formats
  • Output controls for bitrate, sample rate, channels, WAV bit depth, trim, volume, and normalization
  • Batch conversion for up to five files with ZIP download
  • 100 MB per-file and 150 MB total upload limits tuned for shared CPU hosting
  • Temporary server workspace deleted after each conversion response

How to use Audio Converter

  1. Upload audio. Drop an audio file into the upload area, or add up to five files for a batch job.
  2. Choose settings. Use the output options to set the target format, quality, sample rate, channels, trim range, volume, or normalization.
  3. Convert and download. Run the conversion and download the converted audio; batch jobs are returned as a ZIP archive.

Example (before/after)

Source audio

voice-note.wav (large uncompressed recording)

Converted audio

voice-note.mp3 (smaller web-ready output)

Common errors

Unsupported or mislabeled audio file

A file extension can say MP3 or WAV even when the underlying codec is different or damaged.

Fix: Upload the original file when possible and choose the converter that matches the real source format.

Output is larger than expected

Uncompressed formats such as WAV and AIFF are much larger than MP3, AAC, M4A, or OGG.

Fix: Use MP3, M4A, AAC, or OGG for sharing, and use WAV or AIFF only when you need editing-friendly audio.

Trim timestamps are invalid

Trim start and end values must use seconds or HH:MM:SS.mmm, and the end must be later than the start.

Fix: Leave trim fields blank to convert the full file, or enter a valid range such as 00:00:05.000 to 00:00:20.000.

FAQ

Does Audio Converter upload files to the server?

Yes. Audio conversion uses a server-side FFmpeg worker because browsers do not reliably encode every target format. Files are written to a temporary workspace and deleted after the response is returned.

What limits does Audio Converter use?

Each file is limited to 100 MB, each job is limited to 150 MB total, and a batch can include up to five files. These limits are tuned for shared CPU hosting and prevent long-running conversions from crowding out other users.

Can I convert several files with Audio Converter?

Yes. Add up to five files in one job. A single converted file is returned directly with an audio preview; multiple converted files are packaged into a ZIP archive.

Which output formats are supported by Audio Converter?

The converter supports MP3, WAV, M4A, FLAC, AAC, OGG, WMA, and AIFF output. Availability still depends on the FFmpeg build installed on the server.

Which Audio Converter settings affect file size most?

Output format and bitrate matter most. MP3, M4A, AAC, and OGG are smaller lossy formats; WAV and AIFF are much larger because they are uncompressed PCM outputs.

Related tools

Related audio conversion tools: You can also browse the full Audio Tools category for more options.