Audio Fade
Add smooth fade-in and fade-out effects to any audio file. Adjustable duration and curve shape, output as WAV — no upload needed.
100% in your browser. Your file never leaves your device.
0 = no fade-in
0 = no fade-out
Load an audio file to begin.
How to add fades to audio
- Choose your audio file using the file picker.
- Enter the fade-in duration in milliseconds (or 0 to skip).
- Enter the fade-out duration in milliseconds (or 0 to skip).
- Select Linear for a straight-line fade, or Equal-power for a natural-sounding curve.
- Click Apply Fades, preview the result, then download.
Common use cases
- Podcast endings: Fade out the last few seconds of music or speech smoothly.
- Intro music: Fade in a background track so it does not jar the listener.
- Ringtone finishing: Add a short fade-out so the tone does not cut off sharply.
- Sample loops: Add tiny fades to remove clicks at loop points in audio samples.
- Voice recordings: Apply a fade-in to remove pre-roll noise before speech begins.
Related tools: Audio Trimmer · Volume Normalizer · Audio Merger · Audio Converter
Preguntas frecuentes
- What is an audio fade?
- A fade-in gradually increases volume from silence to full at the start of a clip. A fade-out gradually decreases volume to silence at the end. Fades are used to avoid abrupt starts and endings, making transitions sound professional.
- What fade shapes are supported?
- Linear fades change volume at a constant rate. Logarithmic (equal-power) fades follow the equal-power curve used in DJ crossfading and radio production — they sound more natural to the human ear than linear fades. Both options are available.
- How long should the fade be?
- For spoken word and podcasts, 0.2–0.5 s fades work well. For music, 1–3 s is typical for endings. Long ambient outro fades can be 5–10 s. Set both fade-in and fade-out independently.
- Can I apply only a fade-in or only a fade-out?
- Yes. Set either duration to 0 to skip it. You can fade in without fading out, and vice versa.
- Is my file uploaded to process the fade?
- No. The fade is applied entirely in your browser using the Web Audio API OfflineAudioContext and gain automation. Nothing leaves your device.
- What formats can I use as input?
- Any format your browser can decode: MP3, WAV, OGG, FLAC, AAC/M4A. Output is WAV (16-bit PCM), which is universally compatible.
- What if my fade duration is longer than the file?
- The tool automatically clamps the fade duration to half the file duration to prevent the fade-in and fade-out from overlapping. A status message will show the clamped value.
- Can I preview the faded audio before downloading?
- Yes. After processing, the audio player appears with the faded result. Play it to verify before downloading.