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Audio Conversion

Convert WAV to AAC — Free Online Converter

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

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How to Convert

1

Upload your .wav 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 WAV to AAC Conversion

WAV stores uncompressed PCM audio in Microsoft's RIFF container, delivering bit-perfect sound at the cost of large file sizes — roughly 10 MB per minute for CD-quality stereo. AAC (Advanced Audio Coding), standardized as part of MPEG-2 and later MPEG-4, is the successor to MP3 and delivers superior audio quality at equivalent bitrates. AAC is the default audio codec for iTunes, YouTube, Apple Music, and most modern streaming platforms.

Converting WAV to AAC applies perceptual coding to eliminate audio information that human hearing cannot detect, typically achieving 10:1 compression ratios while maintaining near-transparent quality at 256 kbps. This makes AAC the ideal format when you need to distribute, stream, or store large WAV collections efficiently.

Why Convert WAV to AAC?

Uncompressed WAV files are impractical for distribution. A 50-minute album occupies roughly 500 MB as WAV but only 50-80 MB as AAC at 256 kbps with virtually indistinguishable quality. Streaming platforms, podcast hosts, and mobile music libraries all benefit from AAC's efficient compression. Apple's entire ecosystem — from iPhones to AirPods to HomePods — decodes AAC natively with hardware acceleration.

AAC also outperforms MP3 at every bitrate, particularly below 128 kbps where MP3 introduces audible artifacts. For podcasts, audiobooks, and background music, AAC at 96-128 kbps sounds noticeably cleaner than MP3 at the same rate, saving bandwidth and storage without perceptible quality loss.

Common Use Cases

  • Preparing studio masters for iTunes Store or Apple Music distribution
  • Compressing podcast WAV recordings for RSS feed distribution at minimal file size
  • Converting a WAV music library for space-efficient playback on iPhone and iPad
  • Creating streaming-ready audio files for web applications and HTML5 audio players
  • Reducing audiobook WAV masters to practical file sizes for mobile consumption

How It Works

FFmpeg decodes the WAV's PCM stream and encodes it using the native AAC encoder (or libfdk_aac if available for higher quality). The encoder applies modified discrete cosine transform (MDCT), psychoacoustic modeling, and Huffman coding to compress the audio. Output profiles include AAC-LC (Low Complexity — widest compatibility), HE-AAC (High Efficiency — for bitrates below 64 kbps), and HE-AACv2 (adds parametric stereo for ultra-low bitrates). The resulting raw AAC stream is typically wrapped in an M4A (MPEG-4 Part 14) or ADTS container.

Quality & Performance

At 256 kbps AAC-LC, most listeners cannot distinguish the output from the original WAV in blind tests — this is considered transparent quality. At 192 kbps, subtle differences may appear on critical listening equipment. At 128 kbps, AAC still outperforms MP3 at 192 kbps. Below 96 kbps, use HE-AAC or HE-AACv2 to maintain acceptable quality. The conversion is one-way: information discarded by AAC encoding cannot be recovered.

FFMPEG EngineFastMinimal Quality Loss

Device Compatibility

DeviceWAVAAC
Windows PCNativePartial
macOSPartialNative
iPhone/iPadPartialNative
AndroidPartialPartial
LinuxPartialPartial
Web BrowserNativeNo

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 256 kbps AAC-LC for music distribution — it provides transparent quality and is the iTunes Store standard
  • 2For podcasts and spoken word, 96 kbps AAC mono is sufficient and produces files roughly 700 KB per minute
  • 3Choose HE-AAC for streaming at very low bitrates (32-64 kbps) — it uses spectral band replication to maintain perceived quality
  • 4Keep your original WAV masters archived even after AAC conversion, since AAC is lossy and you may need lossless sources later
  • 5Set the output container to M4A rather than raw ADTS for better metadata support and wider device compatibility

Related Conversions

WAV to AAC is the standard path from studio masters to distribution-ready audio. AAC at 256 kbps delivers transparent quality at a fraction of the file size, making it the premier lossy format for Apple-centric workflows and modern streaming.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. AAC delivers better quality than MP3 at every bitrate. At 128 kbps, AAC sounds comparable to MP3 at 192 kbps. The difference is most noticeable at lower bitrates.
256 kbps AAC-LC for transparent quality, 192 kbps for high quality with smaller files, 128 kbps for a good balance. Below 96 kbps, switch to HE-AAC.
Yes, AAC is a lossy codec. However, at 256 kbps the loss is inaudible to most listeners. The original WAV data cannot be recovered from AAC.
Yes. Android has supported AAC playback since version 2.0. All modern Android devices handle AAC natively, though the file may need an M4A container.
AAC is the audio codec (the compression algorithm). M4A is the file container (the wrapper). An M4A file almost always contains AAC-encoded audio. Think of M4A as the box and AAC as the contents.

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