โœจ 100% Free ยท No Upload ยท Private

Free Online Video to MP3 Converter

Pull speech, music, dialogue, or soundtrack audio out of a video file. Pick a portable format, choose the right quality level, trim dead time, and keep the conversion on your own device.

Drag & Drop Your Video

or click to browse โ€” MP4, MOV, AVI, MKV, WebM

Output Format
Trim (optional)
๐Ÿ’ก

Why Choose This Converter?

The homepage is the broad audio extraction hub. Use it when you have a video and need the sound in a practical audio format: MP3 for everyday playback, AAC or M4A for Apple-friendly libraries, WAV for editing, OGG for open web workflows, or FLAC when you want compressed lossless output. Different source videos need different handling. Phone clips often need quick MP3 extraction, meeting recordings may need trimmed voice audio for transcription, concert videos benefit from higher bitrate output, and editor exports sometimes need WAV for cleanup in a DAW. This page keeps those choices in one workflow instead of forcing you into a single format. The converter reads common containers such as MP4, MOV, AVI, MKV, WebM, FLV, WMV, and 3GP through FFmpeg in the browser. Large files still depend on your device memory, so a desktop browser is best for long recordings. For most audio extraction jobs, select the source file, choose the output format and bitrate, trim the range if needed, then download the audio file ready for playback, editing, archiving, or transcription.

Features

Features

  • ๐ŸŽต

    Format chooser for six audio goals: everyday playback, Apple libraries, editing, open web use, compressed lossless, and uncompressed source work

  • ๐Ÿ”’

    Works as the starting point when you know you need audio but have not decided whether MP3, AAC, WAV, M4A, OGG, or FLAC fits best

  • โšก

    Input coverage spans phone videos, screen recordings, legacy containers, web downloads, camera clips, and archive formats

  • ๐ŸŽ›๏ธ

    Trim-first workflow helps extract only the useful section before selecting the final audio format

  • ๐Ÿ“ฑ

    Bitrate and format choices are separated so you can solve quality, compatibility, and file-size needs independently

  • ๐ŸŒ

    Best used as a decision hub that routes broad video-to-audio jobs into the right output format

Process

How It Works

  1. 1

    Select your video

    Click the upload area or drag and drop any video file. MP4, MOV, AVI, MKV, WebM, or any other format. The tool accepts files of any size and codec combination.

  2. 2

    Choose format and bitrate

    Pick your output audio format (MP3, AAC, WAV, OGG, M4A, or FLAC) and select a bitrate. 192 kbps MP3 is recommended for music; 64-128 kbps works well for voice content.

  3. 3

    Optional: trim audio

    Toggle the Trim switch to extract only a specific portion. Enter start and end timecodes in HH:MM:SS format to select exactly the segment you need.

  4. 4

    Convert and download

    Click Convert. WebAssembly processes your file entirely in your browser. When complete, your audio file downloads automatically.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I choose between MP3, AAC, WAV, M4A, OGG, and FLAC?

Use MP3 for maximum playback compatibility, AAC or M4A for Apple-friendly libraries, WAV for editing, OGG for open web workflows, and FLAC when you want lossless audio without the size of WAV.

Is this homepage different from the MP4 to MP3 page?

Yes. The homepage is a multi-format audio extractor. It lets you choose several output audio formats. The MP4 to MP3 page is a focused workflow for one source format and one output format.

Which output should I use for transcription?

MP3 at 64-128 kbps is usually enough for speech transcription. If the recording is noisy and you plan to clean it in an editor first, WAV gives you more room to process the audio.

Which output is best for music?

For casual listening, MP3 at 192 kbps or AAC at 128-192 kbps works well. For editing, remixing, or archiving source material, choose WAV or FLAC instead of a lossy format.

Can I extract audio from long videos?

Yes, but long videos use more memory because the browser has to read and process the file locally. A desktop browser is recommended for long lectures, concerts, webinars, and 4K recordings.

Should I trim before extracting audio?

Trim when you only need a quote, song, lecture section, or meeting highlight. It creates a smaller output and avoids keeping silence, setup time, or unrelated parts of the video.

Why would I choose WAV if it creates a larger file?

WAV is useful when you plan to edit, clean, master, or analyze the audio. It avoids adding another lossy compression step before professional or detailed audio work.

What if my video contains multiple audio tracks?

The converter usually processes the default audio stream. For files with multiple languages or commentary tracks, keep the original video as your source and verify the exported audio before deleting anything.

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