AudioUtils

MP3 to Opus on iPhone

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

MP3Opus

Drop your MP3 file here or click to browse

MP3 (.mp3) · Max 20 MB

Safari on iOS 15.4 and newer runs the converter completely, on the phone itself. There is no App Store download — and no converter app quietly uploading your recordings to its own servers. MP3 files convert to Opus here the same way — nothing to install.

If the file is in Voice Memos or Photos, tap the share icon and choose 'Save to Files' first — that makes it visible to Safari's file picker. The converted file lands in Files (Downloads by default), from where you can share it into Messages, Mail, or any app. Your MP3 comes out as Opus, ready to use straight away.

The MP3 files people convert on an iPhone almost always originate from downloads, old rips, and just about every audio file that has ever been emailed, and MP3 is lossy and built for playback, so editing, production, and some apps and engines want a different format — which is precisely why they're stuck on the phone until you convert them to Opus.

File size stays in the same ballpark — both formats land around 1.4–0.5 MB per minute. Both MP3 and Opus are lossy, so this is a second-generation encode — it can't add anything back. Use 192 kbps or above and the extra loss stays inaudible.

MP3 to Opus is a common iPhone snag specifically because MP3 is lossy and built for playback, so editing, production, and some apps and engines want a different format, and Opus is what your other apps and devices expect. Apple gives you no built-in way to convert audio at all, so the App Store is full of converter apps — many upload your recording to their own servers, show ads against it, and want a subscription. Doing it in Safari means the MP3 file is processed on the phone itself and stays there, which matters when it is a voice memo, an interview, or a recording of your own family.

Your MP3 file never leaves the handset. For iPhone that is the whole argument: downloads are usually personal, and the App Store alternative frequently ships them to a company's servers as the price of a free conversion. Processing the MP3-to-Opus conversion on-device means there is no server to trust in the first place.

MP3 is the format of downloads. It plays where it was made, but MP3 is lossy and built for playback, so editing, production, and some apps and engines want a different format. Opus is the destination because it plays essentially everywhere — Discord recordings and every ordinary phone, browser, and player. Expect a similar file size; the reason to convert is playback and workflow, not disk. Both MP3 and Opus are lossy, so this pair stacks a second encode — at a generous bitrate it stays inaudible, but if a lossless original of the MP3 exists, encode the Opus from that instead.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I convert MP3 to Opus on an iPhone without an app?

Yes. Safari on iOS 15.4+ runs the conversion on the phone itself. There's no App Store download — and no converter app quietly shipping your recordings to its own servers.

How do I get a Voice Memo or a file from Photos into the converter?

Tap the share icon and choose "Save to Files" first. That makes it visible to Safari's file picker, and you can convert straight from there.

Where does the converted file save?

Into the Files app — the Downloads folder by default. From Files you can share it into Messages, Mail, WhatsApp, or any other app.

Is converting on the iPhone private?

Yes, and that's the main reason to do it this way. The recordings people convert are voice memos, interviews, and family moments — processing on-device means there's no server to trust in the first place.

Will a long recording work on the phone?

It will, but the phone does the work locally, so a long file is noticeably faster on a laptop. Typical voice memos convert in seconds on any recent iPhone.

About MP3

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

About Opus

Modern open-source codec. Best quality-per-bit of any lossy format. Used by Discord, WebRTC, and modern browsers.