Convertidor WAV a MP3 — Sin Subida
Convierte archivos WAV a MP3 en tu navegador sin subir nada al servidor. Elige el bitrate y descarga tu MP3 sin límite de tamaño de archivo.
Drop a WAV file here or click to choose one.
How to use
- Click Choose file and select your WAV file (or drag and drop it onto the upload area).
- Choose an output bitrate — 192 kbps is the recommended setting for music.
- Click Convert to MP3. The browser processes the file locally using FFmpeg WebAssembly — no upload happens at any step.
- When the conversion finishes, click Download MP3 to save the file.
Why use a no-upload WAV to MP3 converter?
Most online converters upload your audio to a remote server, which means your file is transmitted over the internet, stored on someone else's hardware, and subject to their privacy policy. For personal recordings, unreleased music, and confidential audio, that is a significant risk. This tool uses FFmpeg compiled to WebAssembly, which runs the entire conversion inside your browser tab. No bytes are sent anywhere — the conversion is as private as opening a file in a desktop application.
The other advantage of a local conversion is no file size cap. Server-based converters typically limit uploads to 50–500 MB to control bandwidth costs. Because this tool runs on your own device, a 2 GB uncompressed studio recording converts just as easily as a 5 MB voice memo.
WAV vs MP3 — when to convert
WAV (PCM) is lossless and uncompressed, making it the standard interchange format for audio production, broadcast, and archival. The trade-off is file size: a three-minute stereo track at 44.1 kHz / 16-bit is roughly 30 MB as WAV. The same track as a 192 kbps MP3 is about 4 MB — a 7× reduction with no perceptible quality difference in normal listening.
Convert WAV to MP3 when you need to share audio by email, upload it to a podcast host, embed it on a website, or store a large music library without filling your drive. Keep the original WAV if you plan to edit, re-master, or archive the recording.
Related music tools
- Audio Trimmer — cut audio to an exact start/end time, output WAV
- Audio Merger — join multiple audio clips into one file
- BPM Tap Tempo — tap to find the tempo of any song
- Online Metronome — keep time at any BPM in your browser
More ways to use this tool
- Convert WAV to MP3 Free — browser-based, no account needed
- WAV to MP3 320 kbps — maximum quality conversion, no upload
- WAV to MP3 No Quality Loss — 320 kbps, client-side
Preguntas frecuentes
- Does this tool upload my WAV file to a server?
- No. The entire conversion runs inside your browser using FFmpeg compiled to WebAssembly. Your audio file never leaves your device — nothing is sent to any server at any point.
- Is there a file size limit?
- There is no server-imposed limit because no upload happens. The practical limit is your device RAM — most modern phones and computers can handle WAV files up to several hundred MB without issue. Very long recordings (multi-hour) may take longer to process.
- Which bitrate should I choose?
- 128 kbps is fine for voice, podcasts, and casual listening. 192 kbps is the recommended default for music — it is transparent on most headphones and speakers. 320 kbps is the highest quality MP3 possible and is indistinguishable from the source WAV on all consumer audio equipment.
- Will I lose quality converting from WAV to MP3?
- Yes, MP3 is a lossy format. The WAV source is lossless PCM; MP3 uses perceptual compression to remove audio data the ear typically cannot hear. At 192 kbps or above, most listeners cannot distinguish the output from the original in a blind test. For archival purposes, keep the original WAV.
- Does it work on iPhone and Android?
- Yes. The tool works in Safari on iPhone (iOS 16+), Chrome and Firefox on Android, and all major desktop browsers. The file picker accepts WAV files from your photo library, Files app, or any connected storage.
- Can I convert stereo and multichannel WAV files?
- Yes. Stereo WAV files are converted to stereo MP3. The channel layout of the source is preserved. Very high channel-count files (beyond stereo) are downmixed to stereo in the output.
Last updated: By jarvisbox