Volume Normalizer
Normalize audio to a consistent loudness level. Supports MP3, WAV, OGG, FLAC, and M4A — 100% in your browser, no upload.
100% in your browser. Your file never leaves your device.
Peak: — dBFS
RMS: — dBFS
Duration: —
Typical: −1 (music), −3 (podcast)
Load an audio file to begin.
How to normalize audio volume
- Choose your audio file. The tool analyses it and shows the current peak and RMS levels.
- Enter the target level in dBFS (−1 for most music, −3 for podcasts).
- Choose Peak or RMS normalization mode.
- Click Normalize. Preview the result in the audio player.
- Download the normalized WAV file.
Common use cases
- Podcast consistency: Ensure every episode sounds equally loud regardless of recording conditions.
- Playlist levelling: Make all tracks in a playlist play at the same perceived volume.
- Voice recording cleanup: Bring up quiet recordings to a usable level before editing.
- Sample preparation: Normalize drum samples so they have consistent punch across a library.
- Pre-mastering: Set a reference level before applying compression or EQ.
Related tools: Audio Trimmer · Audio Fade · Tempo Changer · Audio Converter
Preguntas frecuentes
- What is audio normalization?
- Normalization adjusts the overall volume of an audio file so its loudest peak (peak normalization) or average loudness (RMS normalization) reaches a specific target level. It is used to ensure consistent playback volume across multiple clips.
- What is the difference between peak and RMS normalization?
- Peak normalization scales the audio so the single loudest sample equals the target level. RMS normalization scales so the average energy equals the target, which often results in a more consistently perceived loudness. This tool uses peak normalization by default, with an RMS option available.
- What does 0 dBFS mean?
- 0 dBFS (decibels Full Scale) is the maximum possible level in digital audio — the point at which clipping occurs. Normalized audio is typically set to -1 dBFS or -3 dBFS to leave headroom and avoid distortion during subsequent processing.
- Is my audio file uploaded to perform normalization?
- No. Normalization is performed entirely in your browser by reading the AudioBuffer samples, computing the peak or RMS value, and multiplying each sample by a gain factor. Nothing is transmitted to any server.
- What formats are supported?
- Input: any format your browser can decode (MP3, WAV, OGG, FLAC, AAC/M4A). Output is WAV (16-bit PCM), which plays on all devices.
- Will normalization clip my audio?
- Peak normalization sets the target precisely at your chosen dBFS value without exceeding it, so clipping does not occur. If you normalise to exactly 0 dBFS and there is already a sample at 0 dBFS, the file is returned unchanged.
- What target level should I use for podcasts?
- Podcast platforms such as Spotify and Apple Podcasts normalise to -16 LUFS during playback. For a peak target, -3 dBFS is a safe choice that gives headroom. For spoken-word content, -3 to -6 dBFS is standard.
- What target level should I use for music?
- Streaming platforms normalise music to around -14 LUFS. For peak normalization in a mastering context, -0.1 dBFS is common to avoid inter-sample peaks. Setting -1 dBFS provides a small safety margin.