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Audio Conversion

Convert MP3 to FLAC — Free Online Converter

Convert MPEG Audio Layer 3 (.mp3) to Free Lossless Audio Codec (.flac) online for free. Fast, secure audio conversion with no watermarks or registrati...

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1

Upload your .mp3 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 MP3 to FLAC Conversion

FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) is the open-source lossless audio standard developed by Josh Coalson in 2001. It compresses audio without discarding any data, achieving 40-60% size reduction compared to uncompressed WAV while maintaining bit-perfect reproduction. Converting MP3 to FLAC is a common archival and workflow operation — it creates a lossless container around the decoded MP3 audio that prevents any further quality degradation from future format conversions.

The important nuance: MP3 is lossy, and the data it removed during encoding cannot be recovered. An MP3-to-FLAC file will not sound better than the original MP3. What it does provide is a lossless representation of the decoded MP3 audio that can be transcoded to any other format in the future without accumulating additional artifacts from another lossy encoding step.

Why Convert MP3 to FLAC?

FLAC is the standard archival format for audiophiles and music collectors. If you are building a permanent digital music library, having your collection in FLAC means every future conversion (to AAC for phones, to OGG for Spotify, to ALAC for Apple devices) starts from a lossless source. Converting your MP3s to FLAC now prevents the quality degradation that comes from lossy-to-lossy transcoding chains.

FLAC is also the preferred format for Linux audio playback, audiophile hardware players from brands like Astell&Kern and FiiO, and many DJ applications. Plex, Jellyfin, and other media servers handle FLAC natively and can transcode on-the-fly to whatever the client device needs. If you are building a home media server, FLAC is the canonical source format that these systems are designed to work with.

Common Use Cases

  • Archive an MP3 music collection in lossless format to prevent further quality degradation
  • Prepare a FLAC library for Plex, Jellyfin, or other media servers that transcode on-the-fly
  • Create master copies for audiophile hardware players from Astell&Kern, FiiO, or Sony Walkman
  • Build a lossless source library that can feed future conversions to any target format
  • Import MP3 audio into DJ software like Traktor or Rekordbox that prefers lossless input

How It Works

FFmpeg decodes the MPEG Audio Layer 3 bitstream to 16-bit PCM at the original sample rate (typically 44.1 kHz), then compresses the PCM data using the FLAC encoder at compression level 5 (default). FLAC compression is entirely lossless — the decoded PCM data is mathematically reconstructable from the FLAC file. Output bitrate varies with content complexity, typically 700-1100 kbps for 44.1 kHz stereo. The FLAC container supports Vorbis comments for metadata (title, artist, album, cover art).

Quality & Performance

The FLAC output is a perfect lossless representation of the decoded MP3 audio. No additional quality loss occurs during this conversion. However, the FLAC file cannot contain more audio information than the MP3 source provided. A 128 kbps MP3 converted to FLAC will sound exactly like the 128 kbps MP3 — just stored in a larger lossless container. The value is in preventing cumulative quality loss from future conversions.

FFMPEG EngineFastLossless

Device Compatibility

DeviceMP3FLAC
Windows PCNativePartial
macOSPartialPartial
iPhone/iPadPartialPartial
AndroidNativeNative
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

  • 1FLAC compression level does not affect quality — only file size and encoding speed. Level 5 is ideal for most uses
  • 2The FLAC output will be 2-8x larger than the source MP3 depending on the MP3's original bitrate
  • 3FLAC supports rich metadata via Vorbis comments including embedded cover art
  • 4Media servers like Plex and Jellyfin prefer FLAC and can transcode to client devices on the fly
  • 5Keep your original MP3 files as space-efficient backups if storage is a concern

Related Conversions

MP3 to FLAC conversion is a strategic archival move. While it cannot improve upon the MP3 source quality, it creates a lossless copy that serves as a stable master for any future format conversions, media server deployments, or audiophile hardware playback without accumulating additional compression artifacts.

Gyakran ismetelt kerdesek

No. FLAC losslessly preserves the decoded MP3 audio, but it cannot restore data that MP3 compression discarded. The sound is identical to the MP3 source. The benefit is preventing further quality loss in future conversions.
FLAC uses lossless compression (preserves all decoded audio data), while MP3 uses lossy compression (discards inaudible data). A typical 44.1 kHz stereo FLAC file runs 700-1100 kbps versus MP3's 128-320 kbps.
Yes. Android has supported FLAC natively since version 3.1. Samsung Music, YouTube Music, VLC, and all major Android players handle FLAC playback.
Not natively through Apple Music. You need a third-party player like VLC for iOS, or convert to ALAC for native Apple device playback.
Level 5 (default) offers a good balance of compression ratio and encoding speed. Higher levels (6-8) squeeze out a few percent more compression but take significantly longer. The audio quality is identical at all levels since FLAC is always lossless.
Both are lossless with identical audio quality. FLAC is more widely supported (Android, Linux, Windows, audiophile hardware). ALAC is better for Apple ecosystem users. For platform-agnostic archival, FLAC is the standard choice.

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