TRENITH FIELD GUIDE

How to convert audio between MP3, WAV, FLAC, Ogg, Opus and M4A

Choose the right audio format and convert it locally in your browser without uploading the source file.

Step by step

  1. Choose the source audio and an output format.
  2. Set a bitrate when converting to MP3, Ogg, Opus or M4A.
  3. Convert locally, preview the result and download the new file.

Lossless or lossy

WAV and FLAC preserve the decoded audio without another lossy encoding step. MP3, AAC, Ogg Vorbis and Opus trade some information for much smaller files. Converting one lossy format to another cannot restore quality that was already removed.

Which format should you choose

MP3 has the broadest legacy compatibility. M4A/AAC is common on phones and video platforms. Opus is efficient for speech and modern web use. Ogg Vorbis is open and widely supported. FLAC is useful for lossless archives, while WAV is simple and editor-friendly but large.

What happens on first use

The browser downloads the conversion engine on the first conversion and then processes the source on the device. Browser memory, codec support and available storage still set practical limits, so keep the original until the converted file has been checked.

Do it now with Trenith Tools

Open the free workspace. The tool page explains exactly where the job runs before you choose a file or provider.

Open the tool