Convert AMR to MP3 — Mobile Voice Recording Converter
Convert AMR mobile voice recordings to MP3 format. Play old phone recordings anywhere. Free online converter, no software installation needed....
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Hur man konverterar
Upload your .amr file by dragging it into the upload area or clicking to browse.
Choose your output settings. The default settings work great for most files.
Click Convert and download your .mp3 file when it's ready.
About AMR to MP3 Conversion
AMR (Adaptive Multi-Rate) is the voice codec that powered the mobile phone revolution. Standardized by 3GPP for GSM cellular networks, AMR has been the default voice recording format on millions of Nokia, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, and early Android phones. If you have old phone recordings, voicemail archives, or voice memos from pre-smartphone era devices, they are almost certainly in AMR format.
The problem is that AMR was designed exclusively for voice at telephony bandwidths. It operates at bitrates between 4.75 and 12.2 kbps — incredibly efficient for speech but unusable for music and terribly supported outside of phone operating systems. Desktop media players, web browsers, car stereos, and modern streaming services do not play AMR files. Even many modern Android phones have dropped AMR playback support.
Our converter uses FFmpeg's AMR-NB and AMR-WB decoders to read these compact voice files and re-encode them as standard MP3 using the LAME encoder. The result plays everywhere: phones, computers, car stereos, smart speakers, and every media application in existence.
Why Convert AMR to MP3?
Preservation is the most compelling reason. AMR files from old phones represent irreplaceable audio memories — family voicemails, historic recordings, legal evidence, and personal voice journals. As old devices fail and AMR support dwindles, converting to MP3 ensures these recordings survive in a format that will be playable for decades.
Desktop and modern device playback requires conversion. Windows Media Player does not play AMR. macOS Preview does not play AMR. Most Linux audio players do not play AMR. Even VLC requires specific codec libraries. Converting to MP3 eliminates all playback barriers instantly.
Sharing and archiving demand standard formats. Emailing an AMR file results in an unplayable attachment for most recipients. Cloud storage services cannot preview AMR files. Archival systems expect standard audio formats. MP3 is the safest, most universally understood format for any audio that needs to be shared or preserved long-term.
Common Use Cases
- Convert old Nokia and Samsung phone voice recordings to playable MP3 files
- Preserve voicemail messages from legacy phone systems as MP3 archives
- Play AMR recordings from old Android phones on modern desktop computers
- Share phone recordings with others in a universally compatible format
- Migrate AMR voice memo archives to modern cloud storage with MP3 previews
- Convert AMR evidence recordings to MP3 for legal documentation and court proceedings
How It Works
FFmpeg decodes both AMR-NB (Narrowband, 8 kHz sampling rate, 4.75-12.2 kbps) and AMR-WB (Wideband, 16 kHz, 6.6-23.85 kbps) bitstreams. AMR-NB is far more common in legacy phone recordings, while AMR-WB appears in newer phones and some VoIP systems.
The decoded PCM audio (mono, 8 or 16 kHz) is upsampled to standard MP3 sample rates (22.05 or 44.1 kHz) using a high-quality sinc resampler. The MP3 output uses LAME encoding at 64-128 kbps, which is more than adequate for AMR source quality since the original captures at most 12.2 kbps. Higher MP3 bitrates do not improve quality beyond the source capability but maintain compatibility with players that require minimum bitrates.
Metadata preservation is limited since AMR files rarely contain ID3-style tags. The converter sets basic metadata (filename as title, creation date if available) in the output MP3.
Quality & Performance
AMR recordings are inherently low quality — they were designed for telephony, not music or hi-fi audio. The source is limited to 8 kHz (narrowband) or 16 kHz (wideband) sampling rate and very low bitrates. Converting to MP3 preserves all available quality from the source but cannot enhance it. The MP3 will sound exactly like the AMR — the conversion simply makes it playable everywhere. For very old recordings, some background hiss and compression artifacts are normal and present in the original.
Device Compatibility
| Device | AMR | MP3 |
|---|---|---|
| Windows | No | Native |
| macOS | No | Native |
| iOS | No | Native |
| Android | Partial | Native |
| Linux | No | Native |
| ChromeOS | No | Native |
Recommended Settings by Platform
Podcast Hosting
Resolution: N/A
Bitrate: Audio: 64 kbps mono
AMR source is already mono — 64 kbps preserves full quality
YouTube
Resolution: N/A
Bitrate: Audio: 128 kbps mono
Pair with image/slideshow for YouTube; audio-only not supported
SoundCloud
Resolution: N/A
Bitrate: Audio: 128 kbps mono
Higher bitrate is unnecessary for telephony-quality source
Resolution: N/A
Bitrate: Audio: 64 kbps mono
Tiny file sizes; easily fits within 16MB limit
Dropbox/Cloud
Resolution: N/A
Bitrate: Audio: 128 kbps mono
MP3 enables cloud preview playback that AMR cannot
Discord
Resolution: N/A
Bitrate: Audio: 128 kbps mono
Well within 8MB free limit for voice recordings
Tips for Best Results
- 1Use 64-128 kbps for AMR sources — higher bitrates waste space without improving quality
- 2Transfer AMR files from old phones via Bluetooth, USB cable, or SD card reader
- 3Label converted files with dates and context — AMR files rarely contain metadata
- 4Batch convert entire phone backup folders to preserve all recordings at once
- 5Keep original AMR files as backup even after conversion — they are tiny and serve as source of truth
Related Conversions
Rescue your old phone recordings from obsolete AMR format. Our converter transforms mobile voice memos, voicemails, and phone recordings into universally playable MP3 files, preserving irreplaceable audio memories for the future.