AAC to MP3 — No Upload Needed
Your AAC files never leave your computer. AudioUtils runs the entire conversion in your browser. No server receives your audio. No upload progress bar. Instant results.
Drop your AAC file here or click to browse
AAC (.aac) · Max 20 MB
Traditional online converters upload your file, process it on a remote server, and send it back. That's slow, insecure, and wasteful. AudioUtils eliminates the upload entirely.
The converter uses WebAssembly to run a compiled audio engine in your browser tab. It reads your file locally, converts it locally, and saves the result locally. The network is never involved.
This matters for sensitive audio. Unreleased music, legal recordings, private conversations. With AudioUtils, your files stay yours. Both AAC and MP3 are lossy formats. Each re-encode can degrade quality slightly. Convert once and keep the result.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is AAC better than MP3?
At the same bitrate, AAC generally sounds better than MP3. It's a newer, more efficient codec. But MP3 has broader device support.
Will I lose quality converting AAC to MP3?
Some quality loss is inevitable when transcoding between lossy formats. Use a high bitrate (256-320kbps) to minimize the impact.
What's the difference between AAC and M4A?
AAC is the codec (compression method). M4A is the container format that usually holds AAC audio. They're closely related — M4A files typically contain AAC-encoded audio.
When should I keep AAC instead of converting?
If your devices support AAC, keep it — it's better quality. Only convert to MP3 when you need maximum compatibility.
About AAC
Advanced Audio Coding. Successor to MP3 with improved compression. Widely used in streaming services.
About MP3
The most widely used audio format. Great compatibility, small file size. Ideal for music, podcasts, and general use.