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Audio Conversion

Convert WAV to FLAC — Free Online Converter

Convert Waveform Audio (.wav) to Free Lossless Audio Codec (.flac) online for free. Fast, secure audio conversion with no watermarks or registration....

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Sådan konverterer du

1

Upload your .wav file by dragging it into the upload area or clicking to browse.

2

Choose your output settings. The default settings work great for most files.

3

Click Convert and download your .flac file when it's ready.

About WAV to FLAC Conversion

WAV stores raw uncompressed PCM audio in Microsoft's RIFF container — the gold standard for audio fidelity, but at a steep storage cost of roughly 10 MB per minute for 44.1 kHz/16-bit stereo. FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec), developed by Josh Coalson and released in 2001, is the most widely adopted open-source lossless audio codec. FLAC achieves 50-60% compression ratios while preserving every audio sample bit-for-bit.

Converting WAV to FLAC is the standard practice for archiving and distributing lossless audio. FLAC files are typically 40-60% smaller than the equivalent WAV while being mathematically identical when decoded. Unlike ALAC, FLAC is supported natively on Android, Linux, Windows 10+, and every major music player and streaming platform.

Why Convert WAV to FLAC?

Storage efficiency is the primary driver. A 700 MB WAV album compresses to roughly 350-400 MB as FLAC with zero quality loss. For music collectors with thousands of albums, this translates to terabytes of savings. FLAC is also the industry standard for lossless music distribution — Bandcamp, Tidal, Qobuz, Amazon Music HD, and Deezer HiFi all use or accept FLAC.

FLAC adds significant metadata capabilities that WAV lacks. Vorbis comment tags in FLAC support virtually unlimited metadata fields, embedded album art, ReplayGain values, and cue sheets. This makes FLAC superior to WAV for organized music libraries where tagging and cataloging matter.

Common Use Cases

  • Archiving a WAV music collection at half the storage size with zero quality loss
  • Preparing lossless masters for Bandcamp, Tidal, or Qobuz distribution
  • Converting studio recordings to a format with proper metadata and tagging support
  • Building a lossless music server library compatible with Plex, Roon, or Jellyfin
  • Creating space-efficient backups of audio production sessions

How It Works

FFmpeg decodes the WAV RIFF header and passes the raw PCM samples to the FLAC encoder. FLAC uses fixed and adaptive linear prediction to model the audio signal, then encodes the prediction residuals using Rice coding (a form of entropy coding). Compression levels 0-8 trade encoding speed for file size — level 5 (default) provides an optimal balance. The encoder preserves the original sample rate (up to 655,350 Hz), bit depth (up to 32-bit), and supports up to 8 channels. An MD5 checksum of the original audio is stored in the FLAC header for integrity verification.

Quality & Performance

FLAC is mathematically lossless — decoding a FLAC file produces output bit-for-bit identical to the original WAV input. This can be verified using the built-in MD5 checksum or by binary comparison after round-trip conversion. FLAC compression levels (0-8) only affect encoding speed and file size, never audio quality. Level 0 encodes fastest with larger files; level 8 encodes slowest with marginally smaller files. All levels decode to identical output.

FFMPEG EngineFastLossless

Device Compatibility

DeviceWAVFLAC
Windows PCNativePartial
macOSPartialPartial
iPhone/iPadPartialPartial
AndroidPartialNative
LinuxPartialNative
Web BrowserNativeNo

Recommended Settings by Platform

Spotify

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 320 kbps

OGG Vorbis preferred

Apple Music

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 256 kbps

AAC format required

SoundCloud

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 128 kbps

Lossless FLAC/WAV for best quality

Podcast

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 128 kbps

MP3 mono for spoken word

Tips for Best Results

  • 1Use compression level 5 (the default) for the best balance of encoding speed and file size — higher levels provide diminishing returns
  • 2Add ReplayGain tags during conversion to normalize playback volume across your FLAC library without altering the audio data
  • 3Embed album art in the FLAC file rather than relying on folder images — this ensures artwork displays on all players and devices
  • 4Use the FLAC verification flag during encoding to confirm lossless integrity immediately after conversion
  • 5For ultra-large collections, FLAC level 0 encodes 5-10x faster than level 8 with only 5-8% larger files

Related Conversions

WAV to FLAC is the universal standard for lossless audio archiving and distribution. You get 40-60% smaller files with zero quality compromise and far superior metadata support compared to WAV.

Ofte stillede spørgsmål

Yes. FLAC is mathematically lossless — every sample is preserved exactly. You can convert FLAC back to WAV and get a file bit-for-bit identical to the original.
Level 5 (default) is optimal for most users. Higher levels (6-8) squeeze out 1-2% more compression at significantly slower encoding speed. The quality is identical at all levels.
iOS 11+ supports FLAC playback in the Files app and some third-party players. However, Apple Music and iTunes prefer ALAC. For an all-Apple workflow, consider ALAC instead.
Typically 40-60%. A 700 MB WAV album becomes 350-400 MB as FLAC. Compression varies by content — dense orchestral music compresses less than solo voice recordings.
Yes. FLAC supports sample rates up to 655,350 Hz (though 96 kHz and 192 kHz are the common hi-res rates) and bit depths up to 32-bit. It is the standard format for hi-res music distribution.

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