Professional audio editing tools demand uncompressed audio. Digital Audio Workstations like Pro Tools, Logic Pro, Ableton Live, and FL Studio import WAV files natively, but FLAC support varies — Pro Tools lacks native FLAC import entirely, and many hardware recorders and samplers only recognize WAV. Converting to WAV before importing ensures zero compatibility issues and eliminates the overhead of real-time FLAC decoding during editing sessions where every millisecond of latency matters.
Broadcasting and mastering workflows require WAV. Radio stations, podcast distribution platforms, and mastering engineers work exclusively with uncompressed audio to avoid any potential artifacts from decode-encode cycles. WAV files meet the technical requirements of broadcast standards like EBU R128 and ITU-R BS.1770 without requiring additional processing. When submitting masters for CD replication, vinyl cutting, or streaming distribution, WAV is the universally accepted delivery format.
Hardware compatibility is another compelling reason. Standalone audio players, DJ controllers, church sound systems, car audio head units, and embedded media devices often support WAV but not FLAC. Converting your lossless FLAC library to WAV ensures playback on virtually any device capable of reading audio files, from vintage equipment to modern professional installations.