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Video Conversion

Convert MP4 to WAV — Free Lossless Audio Extractor

Extract lossless WAV audio from MP4 videos. Perfect for editing, podcasts, and music production. Free online converter — no quality loss....

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1

Upload your .mp4 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 .wav file when it's ready.

About MP4 to WAV Conversion

Extracting audio from MP4 video files as lossless WAV is essential for music producers, podcast editors, sound designers, and anyone who needs pristine audio quality for professional work. While MP4 videos typically contain compressed AAC or MP3 audio, converting to WAV decodes that audio into an uncompressed, lossless format that preserves every detail for further editing, mixing, and processing without introducing additional compression artifacts.

Our MP4 to WAV converter uses FFmpeg to decode the MP4's audio stream and output standard PCM WAV files at your chosen sample rate and bit depth. The process strips the video entirely, extracting only the audio data. Conversions complete in seconds — even for hour-long recordings — because audio processing is computationally lightweight compared to video encoding.

Why Convert MP4 to WAV?

Professional audio editing demands uncompressed formats. Digital audio workstations (DAWs) like Pro Tools, Logic Pro, Ableton Live, and Audacity work most efficiently with WAV files. Applying effects, EQ, compression, and other processing to already-compressed formats (like MP4's AAC audio) introduces generation loss — each re-encoding degrades quality slightly. Starting from WAV ensures your edits operate on the highest-quality source available.

WAV is the standard interchange format for audio production. Recording studios, broadcast facilities, film post-production houses, and podcast production teams use WAV as their working format. When you extract audio from an MP4 interview, lecture, or performance recording, WAV ensures maximum fidelity for the editing and mixing process.

Podcast workflows benefit enormously from WAV extraction. Interview recordings captured on video (Zoom, Teams, phone cameras) contain the audio you actually need. Extracting to WAV gives your podcast editor an uncompressed source file that withstands multiple rounds of editing, noise reduction, and processing before the final compressed MP3 or AAC export.

Common Use Cases

  • Extract interview audio from video recordings for podcast post-production
  • Isolate music or sound effects from MP4 files for use in audio production
  • Create high-quality audio archives from concert and performance recordings
  • Extract narration audio from video tutorials for repurposing as audiobooks or podcasts
  • Prepare audio from video recordings for forensic analysis or transcription
  • Extract lossless audio stems from music videos for DJ sets and remixes

How It Works

The conversion uses FFmpeg's audio decoding pipeline to extract and decode the MP4 file's audio stream. AAC, MP3, Opus, FLAC, and other codecs embedded in MP4 containers are decoded to raw PCM samples, then written as standard WAV (RIFF WAVE format) at the source's native sample rate and channel layout.

Default output is 16-bit PCM at the source sample rate (typically 44.1kHz or 48kHz). You can optionally upsample to 24-bit or 32-bit float for maximum headroom in professional audio workflows. Channel layout is preserved — stereo MP4 audio produces stereo WAV, surround sound produces multi-channel WAV.

The video stream is completely discarded during extraction. This means the output file size depends only on the audio duration, sample rate, bit depth, and channel count. A one-minute stereo WAV at 44.1kHz/16-bit is approximately 10.1MB, regardless of the source MP4's video resolution or complexity.

Quality & Performance

Converting MP4 to WAV cannot restore quality lost during the original audio compression. If the MP4 contains 128kbps AAC audio, the WAV output contains the same audio fidelity — just in an uncompressed wrapper. The benefit is avoiding further quality loss from re-compression during editing. For professional work, WAV provides the best foundation. Uncompressed PCM data allows non-destructive editing and multiple processing passes without cumulative compression artifacts. The trade-off is file size — WAV files are roughly 10x larger than equivalent compressed formats. Ensure you have adequate storage for large WAV libraries.

FFMPEG EngineFastLossless

Device Compatibility

DeviceMP4WAV
WindowsNativeNative
macOSNativeNative
iOSNativeNative
AndroidNativeNative
LinuxNativeNative
ChromeOSNativePartial

Recommended Settings by Platform

YouTube

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: Audio: 48kHz/16-bit stereo

YouTube requires video — WAV for editing before re-upload

Instagram

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: Audio: 44.1kHz/16-bit

Instagram requires video — extract WAV for podcast repurposing

Tips for Best Results

  • 1Choose 48kHz/16-bit for standard video audio extraction — it matches most MP4 sources
  • 2Use 24-bit output when you plan heavy processing (EQ, compression, noise reduction) in a DAW
  • 3Trim the MP4 video first if you only need a specific audio segment
  • 4For podcasts, extract to WAV, edit in your DAW, then export the final version as MP3 or AAC
  • 5WAV files are large — ensure you have sufficient disk space before extracting long recordings

Related Conversions

MP4 to WAV conversion gives you lossless, uncompressed audio ready for professional editing in any DAW. Whether extracting podcast interviews, music performances, or narration from video recordings, our converter delivers pristine WAV output in seconds. The uncompressed format ensures your editing workflow maintains maximum audio fidelity from source to final master.

Ofte stilte spørsmål

No. WAV is lossless, but it cannot restore detail lost during the original compression. If the MP4 audio is 128kbps AAC, the WAV contains that same quality in an uncompressed format. The benefit is preventing further quality loss during editing and re-encoding.
WAV stores raw, uncompressed audio samples. A minute of stereo audio at CD quality (44.1kHz/16-bit) occupies about 10MB in WAV, compared to roughly 1MB for AAC at 128kbps. This 10x size difference is the cost of lossless, edit-friendly audio.
Match the source format for no quality change — typically 44.1kHz/16-bit (CD quality) or 48kHz/16-bit (video standard). Choose 24-bit for extra headroom in professional mixing. Going higher than the source provides no benefit and only increases file size.
Use our video trimmer tool first to cut the MP4 to the desired time range, then convert the trimmed clip to WAV. This approach extracts only the audio segment you need without processing the entire file.
Yes. The converter preserves the original channel layout. 5.1 surround sound MP4 audio produces a 6-channel WAV file. You can optionally downmix to stereo if your workflow requires two-channel audio.
Absolutely. Standard PCM WAV is the most universally supported audio format in professional DAWs. Every major audio application — Pro Tools, Logic Pro, Ableton Live, Audacity, Reaper, FL Studio — imports WAV natively without conversion.
Audio extraction is very fast — typically 1-5 seconds for a standard-length video. Even hour-long recordings extract in under 30 seconds because audio processing is computationally simple compared to video encoding.
FLAC is lossless compressed — same quality as WAV at about 60% of the file size. For pure archival, FLAC saves storage. For active editing and production, WAV is preferred because all DAWs handle it natively and it requires no decompression during playback.

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