Convert OGV to AAC — Free Online Converter
Convert Ogg Video (.ogv) to Advanced Audio Coding (.aac) online for free. Fast, secure video conversion with no watermarks or registration....
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Cách chuyển đổi
Upload your .ogv 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 .aac file when it's ready.
About OGV to AAC Conversion
OGV files store Vorbis audio alongside Theora video in Xiph.org's open container. Vorbis is an open-source lossy audio codec that competes with AAC and MP3 in quality. AAC (Advanced Audio Coding) is the MPEG-4 standard audio format, delivering excellent quality at low bitrates and playing natively on every iOS device, Android phone, and modern computer without any third-party software.
Why Convert OGV to AAC?
Extracting audio from OGV to AAC produces the most universally playable audio format from open-source video content. While Vorbis is an excellent codec, it lacks native support on iOS and many hardware audio players. AAC fills this gap with truly universal playback support.
This conversion is common when harvesting audio from OGV conference talks, educational videos from Wikimedia, and open-source project screencasts where only the audio content is needed.
Common Use Cases
- Extracting lecture audio from OGV conference recordings for podcast distribution
- Pulling audio from Wikimedia educational OGV videos for mobile listening on any device
- Creating AAC audio files from open-source tutorial screencasts for offline study
- Isolating music tracks from OGV video content for personal listening libraries
- Extracting narration from OGV documentation videos for accessibility audio descriptions
How It Works
FFmpeg demuxes the OGV container, extracts the Vorbis audio stream, decodes it to PCM, and re-encodes to AAC using the native FFmpeg AAC encoder or libfdk_aac. The output is an ADTS-wrapped AAC file. Vorbis typically operates at 44.1 kHz stereo, which maps directly to AAC's standard parameters. Quality-based encoding (-q:a) or constant bitrate (-b:a) modes are available.
Quality & Performance
Since both Vorbis and AAC are lossy codecs, transcoding introduces a small generation loss. Using AAC at a bitrate 20-30% higher than the Vorbis source minimizes audible artifacts. At 192 kbps AAC from a 160 kbps Vorbis source, the quality difference is negligible for most listeners.
Device Compatibility
| Device | OGV | AAC |
|---|---|---|
| Windows PC | Partial | Partial |
| macOS | Partial | Native |
| iPhone/iPad | Partial | Native |
| Android | Partial | Partial |
| Linux | Partial | Partial |
| Web Browser | No | No |
Recommended Settings by Platform
YouTube
Resolution: 1920x1080
Bitrate: 8-12 Mbps
H.264 recommended for fast processing
Resolution: 1080x1080
Bitrate: 3.5 Mbps
Square or 9:16 for Reels
TikTok
Resolution: 1080x1920
Bitrate: 4 Mbps
9:16 vertical, under 60s ideal
Twitter/X
Resolution: 1280x720
Bitrate: 5 Mbps
Under 140s, 512MB max
Resolution: 960x540
Bitrate: 2 Mbps
16MB limit for standard, 64MB for document
Discord
Resolution: 1280x720
Bitrate: 4 Mbps
8MB free, 50MB Nitro
Tips for Best Results
- 1Use AAC at 192 kbps or higher to minimize artifacts when transcoding from Vorbis lossy source
- 2Extract to FLAC first as an intermediate step if you plan to produce multiple lossy formats — this avoids cascading generation losses
- 3Use 128 kbps AAC for speech content where the quality tradeoff is imperceptible
- 4Add metadata (title, artist) to the AAC output for proper library organization on mobile devices
- 5Batch extract from multiple OGV files when processing a conference recording library
Related Conversions
OGV to AAC extraction produces universally compatible audio from open-source video, making Vorbis-encoded content accessible on every device.