Music Converter
Convert songs into the format that actually fits where you listen: MP3 for older players, AAC for smaller modern files, FLAC for lossless copies, or WAV for editing. Everything runs in the browser, so you can work through a music library without an upload step.
- Useful for phones, cars, portable players, and local libraries
- Fast conversion with practical presets for music
- Fine-tune bitrate and output format when needed
Convert Files in Your Browser
Drop files, pick the output format, and convert locally without uploads or signup.
How to convert music files
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1
Add the tracks you want to convert
Queue one song or a full batch of music files.
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2
Choose the right preset
Use Music for balanced quality or adjust format and bitrate manually.
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3
Download ready-to-play exports
Converted files are generated locally for private playback workflows.
Related tools
When a music converter is actually useful
Most music conversion jobs are not about chasing perfect specs. They are about making the file practical again: getting a FLAC album onto a phone, making tracks work in the car, or shrinking a library that has grown too large.
- For older players and car stereos: export MP3.
- For smaller modern files: try AAC.
- For archive copies: keep FLAC.
- For editing and DAWs: use WAV.
Recommended settings for music
- Everyday listening: MP3 at 192 kbps stereo is a safe default.
- Smaller files with good quality: AAC at 128-192 kbps stereo.
- Higher quality portable copies: MP3 at 256 or 320 kbps stereo.
- Archiving or editing: keep FLAC or WAV instead of re-encoding to lossy audio.
How to choose the right format
- MP3: still the easiest choice for broad compatibility.
- AAC: a good option when you want smaller files without leaning on older formats.
- FLAC: better for keeping a lossless music library.
- WAV: useful when the next step is editing, not casual listening.
Common conversion mistakes to avoid
- Converting from already compressed copies: start from the best source you have.
- Dropping bitrate too far: 128 kbps may be fine for speech, but many songs need more room.
- Re-encoding over and over: export the final listening format once instead of repeatedly converting the same track.
Quick fixes when the result is not right
- The output sounds rough: move from 128 to 192 kbps or higher.
- The file is still too large: try AAC or step down the bitrate once.
- The player does not recognize it: export MP3 for the widest support.
Related guides and converters
Choose the target format above, keep the source on your device, and export a listening-ready copy in one pass.