MP3 to FLAC — No Upload Needed
Your MP3 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 MP3 file here or click to browse
MP3 (.mp3) · 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. MP3 is lossy. Converting to FLAC won't restore lost data, but gives you an uncompressed container for editing workflows.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does converting MP3 to FLAC make it lossless?
No. The audio quality remains identical to the source MP3. FLAC is the container format, but the audio data inside was already compressed with loss. For true lossless quality, start with an uncompressed source like CD audio or WAV.
Will the FLAC file be larger than the MP3?
Yes, somewhat. FLAC wraps the decoded audio in lossless compression, so the file will be larger than the MP3 but smaller than the equivalent WAV.
When does MP3 to FLAC conversion make sense?
When you need FLAC format for compatibility reasons — certain audio players, home theater systems, or archival workflows that require FLAC input.
What's the best source for FLAC files?
Rip from CDs, buy from services like Bandcamp or Qobuz, or convert from WAV/AIFF masters. Starting with a lossless source ensures true FLAC quality.
About MP3
The most widely used audio format. Great compatibility, small file size. Ideal for music, podcasts, and general use.
About FLAC
Lossless compression. Perfect quality at roughly half the size of WAV. The choice for audiophiles and archiving.