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Audio Conversion

Convert M4A to ALAC — Free Online Converter

Convert MPEG-4 Audio (.m4a) to Apple Lossless Audio Codec (.alac) online for free. Fast, secure audio conversion with no watermarks or registration....

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Как конвертировать

1

Upload your .m4a 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 .m4a file when it's ready.

About M4A to ALAC Conversion

M4A files can contain either AAC (lossy) or ALAC (lossless) audio. If your M4A already contains ALAC, there is nothing to convert — it is already in the target format. However, if your M4A contains AAC audio (such as iTunes Store 256 kbps purchases), converting to ALAC re-encodes the lossy audio into Apple's lossless codec. The result is a larger file that stores the AAC-decoded audio losslessly, but this does not recover any quality that was lost during the original AAC encoding.

Why Convert M4A to ALAC?

The main practical reason is format standardization. If you maintain an ALAC library and receive M4A files encoded as AAC, you might convert them to ALAC for consistency in your library management. Some DAWs and audio tools identify ALAC vs AAC M4A files differently and handle them with different import pipelines. Note that converting AAC M4A to ALAC does not improve audio quality — it simply prevents further generational loss if the file will be decoded and re-encoded in future workflows.

Common Use Cases

  • Standardizing an Apple Music library to all-ALAC for consistent lossless flagging
  • Preventing further generational quality loss when files will be re-encoded in audio production
  • Converting AAC Voice Memos to ALAC before importing into Logic Pro for editing
  • Ensuring iTunes library consistency when mixing purchased (AAC) and ripped (ALAC) content
  • Archiving AAC recordings in a lossless wrapper to preserve their exact decoded state

How It Works

FFmpeg decodes the AAC stream inside the M4A to PCM, then encodes using ALAC back into an M4A container. The result is an M4A file with ALAC codec instead of AAC. If the source already contains ALAC, a simple stream copy (container remux) is all that is needed. ALAC in M4A uses the same iTunes metadata atom structure as AAC in M4A, so all tags and artwork transfer seamlessly.

Quality & Performance

If source is AAC: no quality improvement. The AAC artifacts are preserved exactly in the ALAC output, but the file is now lossless relative to the decoded AAC signal. If source is already ALAC: stream copy produces an identical file. Converting lossy to lossless never adds quality — it only prevents future generational loss.

FFMPEG EngineFastLossless

Device Compatibility

DeviceM4AALAC
Windows PCPartialPartial
macOSNativeNative
iPhone/iPadNativeNative
AndroidPartialPartial
LinuxPartialPartial
Web BrowserNoNo

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

  • 1Check if your M4A is already ALAC before converting — the operation is unnecessary for existing ALAC files
  • 2Do not delete AAC originals expecting ALAC versions to sound better — they will not
  • 3Use ALAC conversion when archiving AAC recordings that you may need to edit or re-encode later
  • 4For true quality improvement, re-rip from CD or re-download from a lossless source like Qobuz or Bandcamp

Related Conversions

M4A (AAC) to ALAC conversion is useful for library standardization and preventing future generational loss. It does not improve audio quality but ensures the decoded signal is preserved without further degradation.

Часто задаваемые вопросы

No. The quality is identical to the original 256 kbps AAC. The file will be larger (lossless encoding of the decoded AAC signal), but the audio content is unchanged.
In iTunes/Music app, right-click the track and select 'Get Info' > 'File' tab. The 'Kind' field shows 'AAC audio file' or 'Apple Lossless audio file.' Alternatively, ffprobe shows the codec as 'aac' or 'alac'.
ALAC is a lossless codec — it stores the exact PCM samples. Those samples come from decoding the AAC, so they include the AAC artifacts. Lossless encoding of any source produces larger files than lossy encoding.
Not from the file alone. The ALAC container does not record that the PCM came from a lossy source. Spectral analysis may show the high-frequency cutoff characteristic of AAC encoding.
Only if you exclusively use Apple devices and want consistency. For AAC files, the conversion inflates file size without quality benefit. For FLAC or WAV originals, ALAC is a good Apple-native lossless option.

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