Convert AAC to WAV Free
Convert AAC to WAV without paying a cent. No trial period. No account required. Just open the page and convert.
Drop your AAC file here or click to browse
AAC (.aac) · Max 20 MB
The catch with most "free" converters shows up at the end: the download needs an account, a watermark tone is mixed into the audio, or your file waits in a queue behind paying users. None of that applies here. The engine is the same one Pro uses — same speed, same bitrate options — and the output is clean and unmarked.
Free also means free of the usual hidden cost: your file. Many no-cost converters are free precisely because your upload is the product. Here the conversion runs in your browser, so the AAC never leaves your device. Given that AAC files usually come from HLS streaming segments, broadcast pipelines, Android recording apps, and hardware recorders, that's worth more than the price.
Expect growth, not shrinkage: about 10 MB per minute versus 1.2. That's the price of an uncompressed or lossless container, and it buys you an editing chain that costs nothing further. Don't expect an upgrade: WAV faithfully preserves whatever you give it, including everything AAC already threw away. The value is a loss-free chain from here on, not restoration.
Free covers input files up to 20MB file size limit with a 10-second preview output, and 5 conversions per month. Pro removes those limits for full-length conversions up to 500MB file size limit — and the privacy behaviour is identical, because there was never a server in the loop.
Where does a AAC file even come from? Usually HLS streaming segments, broadcast pipelines, Android recording apps, and hardware recorders. The catch is that a bare .aac stream lacks the container index that tells software its duration, so players won't list it and editors import it wrong. WAV is the destination when you need uncompressed, edit-ready audio that every DAW and editor accepts. Expect growth, not shrinkage: about 10 MB per minute versus 1.2. That's the price of an uncompressed or lossless container, and it buys you an editing chain that costs nothing further. One honest note on this exact pair: AAC is already lossy, so moving to WAV cannot restore detail the AAC encoder discarded — it hands you an uncompressed container, not better audio, and the value is a loss-free chain from here on.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this AAC to WAV converter really free?
Yes — no watermark, no signup, no queue. Free covers files up to 20MB file size limit, 5 conversions per month, and a 10-second preview output. Pro removes those caps; the engine and audio quality are identical on both tiers.
What's the catch with free converters?
Usually one of four: a watermark tone in the audio, a forced account before download, a throttled queue behind paying users, or your file quietly becoming the product on someone's server. None apply here, because the conversion never leaves your machine.
Do I need an account to download the WAV file?
No. The file downloads straight from your browser the moment conversion finishes — it never went anywhere, so there's nothing to gate behind a login.
Is the free output lower quality?
No. Free and Pro use the same encoder and the same bitrate options. Quality is never the paywall — the free tier limits length and file size, not fidelity.
How much smaller or larger will the file be?
Expect growth, not shrinkage: about 10 MB per minute versus 1.2. That's the price of an uncompressed or lossless container, and it buys you an editing chain that costs nothing further.
About AAC
Advanced Audio Coding. Successor to MP3 with improved compression. Widely used in streaming services.
About WAV
Uncompressed audio format. Perfect quality with no data loss. Standard for music production and professional audio work.