AudioUtils

MOV to FLAC — No Signup Required

Convert MOV to FLAC without handing over your email. No account. No newsletter. No "verify your inbox" step. Open the page, drop your file, done.

MOVFLAC

Drop your MOV file here or click to browse

MOV (.mov) · Max 20 MB

Most converter sites force you to create an account before converting. It's a growth hack, not a feature. AudioUtils skips all that. The converter works immediately.

Free users get 5 conversions per month without any account. Need more? Pro accounts exist but are never required for basic use.

Your privacy matters. No signup means no tracking profile tied to your conversions. No email list. No data to breach. MOV is lossy. Converting to FLAC won't restore lost data, but gives you an uncompressed container for editing workflows.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does it matter if my MOV has AAC or ALAC audio?

Yes — for quality, not for the workflow. If your MOV holds ALAC (Apple Lossless), the FLAC output is bit-perfect (both formats are lossless). If it holds AAC (lossy), the FLAC wraps the decoded AAC losslessly — the audio is whatever the AAC was. The converter handles both automatically; you don't need to know which one your file uses.

How do I know what audio my MOV contains?

On macOS: open the file in QuickTime, choose Window → Show Movie Inspector. Format will show 'AAC' or 'Apple Lossless'. On Windows: open in MediaInfo (free download). For iPhone videos, it's almost always AAC. For Final Cut exports with 'High Quality' settings, it may be ALAC or PCM.

What's the file size difference?

FLAC is ~half the size of WAV at the same quality, and 5–10× the size of the source AAC inside the MOV. A 1-minute iPhone video with AAC audio (~1 MB of audio) yields a 5–10 MB FLAC. ALAC-source MOVs convert to FLACs of similar size to the original ALAC track.

Will the conversion preserve audio sync?

The FLAC contains only audio, so 'sync' becomes irrelevant once it's standalone. The audio's start point, sample rate, and channel layout are preserved exactly. If you re-pair the FLAC with video later, it should align frame-accurately to the original timeline.

Why not just convert to WAV?

FLAC and WAV are both lossless. FLAC is half the size, supports better metadata, and is preferred for music workflows. Use WAV if a specific tool demands it (some hardware samplers, broadcast deliverables) or if you need PCM compatibility. Otherwise, FLAC is the better default.

Can I convert iPhone Voice Memos that exported as MOV?

Yes, though Voice Memos usually export as M4A. If you have a MOV, drop it in — the converter handles MOV containers regardless of source. The output FLAC will be voice-grade audio you can edit, transcribe, or archive.

About MOV

Apple QuickTime video container. Common for iPhone recordings and Final Cut Pro exports. Extract the audio track to MP3, WAV, or other formats.

About FLAC

Lossless compression. Perfect quality at roughly half the size of WAV. The choice for audiophiles and archiving.