AudioUtils

MP3 to AAC on Linux

Convert MP3 to AAC on your Linux. No app to download. Open your browser, drop your file, and convert. Done in seconds.

MP3AAC

Drop your MP3 file here or click to browse

MP3 (.mp3) · Max 20 MB

Runs in Firefox and Chrome on any Linux distro. No terminal commands. No package managers. AudioUtils uses WebAssembly to run the conversion engine locally. Your audio stays on your device.

If you prefer the command line, FFmpeg is an alternative. But AudioUtils is faster for quick one-off conversions.

Both MP3 and AAC are lossy formats. Each re-encode can degrade quality slightly. Convert once and keep the result. The output is identical regardless of which device or browser you use.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does converting MP3 to AAC improve quality?

No — you can't improve quality by converting between lossy formats. The benefit comes from using AAC as your target format from the start, where it outperforms MP3.

Where is AAC used?

YouTube, Spotify, Apple Music, and most streaming platforms use AAC. It's also the default codec for iPhone, iPad, and modern Android devices.

What's the difference between AAC and M4A?

AAC is the codec (compression algorithm). M4A is the file container that typically holds AAC audio. They're closely related.

Should I switch from MP3 to AAC?

For new audio, yes — AAC is better. For existing MP3 libraries, the quality gain from transcoding is minimal and may introduce artifacts.

About MP3

The most widely used audio format. Great compatibility, small file size. Ideal for music, podcasts, and general use.

About AAC

Advanced Audio Coding. Successor to MP3 with improved compression. Widely used in streaming services.