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Audio Conversion

Convert Opus to AAC — Free Online Converter

Convert Opus Audio Codec (.opus) to Advanced Audio Coding (.aac) online for free. Fast, secure audio conversion with no watermarks or registration....

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Nasıl Dönüştürülür

1

Upload your .opus 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 .aac file when it's ready.

About Opus to AAC Conversion

Opus and AAC are both modern lossy audio codecs, but they serve different ecosystems. Opus, standardized by the IETF in 2012, dominates real-time communication — it powers Discord voice chat, WhatsApp calls, and WebRTC audio in every browser. AAC (Advanced Audio Coding), developed by the MPEG group in 1997 and continuously refined, is the default audio format for Apple devices, YouTube, Spotify's internal encoding, and broadcast television worldwide.

Converting Opus to AAC moves your audio from the open-standard internet world into the Apple and broadcast ecosystem. While Opus technically achieves better quality at any given bitrate, AAC has vastly broader device support — every iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, game console, smart TV, and car infotainment system plays AAC natively without any third-party software.

Why Convert Opus to AAC?

Apple devices do not support Opus playback in their native music and media apps. If you have voice recordings, podcast captures, or audio from Discord and need to play them in Apple Music, import them into GarageBand, or share them with iPhone users, AAC is the required format. Apple's entire audio pipeline — from AirPlay to CarPlay to HomePod — is built around AAC.

Beyond Apple, AAC is required for uploading audio to platforms like iTunes Connect (for podcast distribution), certain online radio stations, and professional broadcast workflows that mandate MPEG standards. YouTube also re-encodes all uploaded audio to AAC, so providing AAC source material avoids a double-encode quality penalty. Converting Opus to AAC at 256 kbps produces transparent-quality audio indistinguishable from the Opus source for most listeners.

Common Use Cases

  • Play Discord voice recordings on iPhone, iPad, or Mac without third-party apps
  • Import WebRTC audio captures into Apple Music or iTunes library
  • Prepare podcast audio recorded in Opus for Apple Podcasts submission
  • Share voice recordings with colleagues who use Apple devices exclusively
  • Upload audio to YouTube without double-encoding quality loss
  • Embed audio in iOS apps that require AAC format

How It Works

FFmpeg decodes the Opus stream (typically 48 kHz, up to 510 kbps, using the libopus decoder) and re-encodes it with the native AAC encoder at the specified bitrate (default 128 kbps) and 44.1 kHz sample rate. The AAC-LC (Low Complexity) profile is used for maximum compatibility. The output is wrapped in a raw ADTS container (.aac) or can be placed in an M4A container for better metadata support. Opus's internal 48 kHz rate is downsampled to 44.1 kHz to match the AAC standard.

Quality & Performance

At 128 kbps AAC, the output is transparent for speech and near-transparent for music relative to the Opus source. At 256 kbps AAC, the conversion is perceptually lossless — no human listener can distinguish it from the Opus original in blind tests. Since both Opus and AAC are lossy codecs, there is a theoretical generation loss from decoding one lossy format and re-encoding to another, but at adequate bitrates this is inaudible.

FFMPEG EngineFastMinimal Quality Loss

Device Compatibility

DeviceOpusAAC
Windows PCPartialPartial
macOSPartialNative
iPhone/iPadPartialNative
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

  • 1Use 192-256 kbps for music content to ensure transparent quality after the lossy-to-lossy conversion
  • 2For speech recordings from Discord or WebRTC, 128 kbps AAC is more than sufficient
  • 3If you need the file for Apple devices specifically, wrap the AAC in an M4A container for better metadata handling
  • 4AAC-LC profile provides the widest compatibility — avoid HE-AAC unless targeting mobile streaming
  • 5Consider converting to FLAC first if you plan to re-encode to multiple lossy formats from the same Opus source

Related Conversions

Opus to AAC conversion is the standard bridge between the WebRTC/internet audio world and the Apple/broadcast ecosystem. At 192-256 kbps AAC, you get transparent quality that plays natively on billions of devices worldwide, making it the practical choice whenever Opus compatibility falls short.

Sıkça Sorulan Sorular

At the same bitrate, Opus generally achieves slightly better quality than AAC according to listening tests by the Fraunhofer Institute and Xiph.org. However, the difference is small at 128+ kbps, and AAC has vastly broader device compatibility, especially on Apple hardware.
For speech content, 96-128 kbps AAC is transparent. For music, 192-256 kbps AAC preserves excellent quality. Going above 256 kbps offers no audible benefit and just increases file size.
Yes. AAC is the native audio format for all Apple devices. The converted file plays in Apple Music, the Files app, Voice Memos, and every iOS media player without any additional software.
No. Both Opus and AAC are lossy codecs, so converting between them always involves decoding one lossy format and re-encoding to another. However, at 192+ kbps AAC, the quality difference is imperceptible to human ears.
YouTube re-encodes all audio to AAC (for the MP4 stream) and Opus (for the WebM stream) regardless of input. Providing AAC avoids the extra decode-encode cycle for the MP4 version, which is what most viewers receive.
At the same bitrate, files are similar in size since bitrate determines data per second regardless of codec. However, Opus achieves equivalent quality at lower bitrates, so an Opus file that sounds as good as 128 kbps AAC might only need 96 kbps.

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