Upload WAV Files
Drag in one or more WAV files up to 250 MB each, then convert them to OGG.
Drop WAV files here
or click to browse your device
Output Settings
Private Conversion
Files are decoded and encoded locally in your browser. They are not uploaded to a server.
Format Notes
- MP3 is best for broad compatibility.
- WAV and AIFF are uncompressed and much larger.
- AAC, OGG, and Opus depend on browser recorder support.
About WAV to OGG Conversion
This tool decodes WAV audio locally in your browser and converts it to OGG. It is useful for turning large WAV files into efficient web audio. Files are processed on your device, and finished outputs can be downloaded one by one or together as a ZIP.
How to Convert WAV to OGG
- Upload WAV files: Drag and drop files into the upload area or click to browse.
- Choose settings: Adjust bitrate, sample rate, and mono or stereo options where available.
- Convert locally: Start conversion and let the browser process each file in sequence.
- Download results: Save individual OGG files or download the full ZIP.
Why Convert WAV to OGG?
Converting WAV to OGG is useful for turning large WAV files into efficient web audio. The source file is decoded locally, then written as modern web audio output using your selected settings.
WAV
- Accepted input: .wav
- Decoded locally in your browser
- Works best when your browser supports the source format
OGG
- Output type: modern web audio
- Mono or stereo output available
- Download single files or a ZIP bundle
Quality and File Size
| Area | Guidance |
|---|---|
| Quality | OGG output is efficient for web playback and commonly uses Opus or Vorbis depending on browser support. |
| Settings | Use 96-128 kbps for speech and podcasts, or 160 kbps and above for music. |
| Playback | OGG recording support varies by browser. Firefox and some Chromium-based browsers handle it best. |
Stereo vs Mono
Stereo
Stereo keeps separate left and right channels. Use it for music, ambience, gaming audio, and files where width or direction matters.
Mono
Mono blends audio into one channel. Use it for speech, lectures, voice notes, and smaller spoken-word files.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will conversion reduce quality?
Converting to compressed formats can reduce quality, especially at low bitrates. Choose a higher bitrate when preserving detail matters.
Are files uploaded?
No. Files are decoded and converted locally in your browser, so the conversion can run without sending audio to a server.
Which settings should I use?
For music, keep stereo and use a higher bitrate. For voice, mono and a lower bitrate usually keep speech clear while reducing file size.
Can I convert many files?
Yes. Add multiple WAV files, convert them in a batch, then download each result or save everything together as a ZIP.
Browser Support
Browser decoding support varies by input format and output format. If a file cannot be decoded or recorded, try a modern Chromium-based browser or Firefox.