OGG to WAV on iPhone
Convert OGG to WAV on your iPhone. No app to download. Open your browser, drop your file, and convert. Done in seconds.
Drop your OGG file here or click to browse
OGG (.ogg) · 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. OGG files convert to WAV 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 OGG comes out as WAV, ready to use straight away.
The OGG files people convert on an iPhone almost always originate from game assets, Linux software, Audacity exports, and royalty-free sound libraries, and OGG plays in browsers and game engines but is refused by iPhones, most car stereos, and plenty of upload forms — which is precisely why they're stuck on the phone until you convert them to WAV.
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 OGG already threw away. The value is a loss-free chain from here on, not restoration.
OGG to WAV is a common iPhone snag specifically because OGG plays in browsers and game engines but is refused by iPhones, most car stereos, and plenty of upload forms, and WAV 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 OGG 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 OGG file never leaves the handset. For iPhone that is the whole argument: game assets 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 OGG-to-WAV conversion on-device means there is no server to trust in the first place.
Most people meet OGG through game assets. It is a fine format there; the trouble is that OGG plays in browsers and game engines but is refused by iPhones, most car stereos, and plenty of upload forms. WAV is the destination when you need uncompressed, edit-ready audio that every DAW and editor accepts. Budget for roughly 10 MB per minute — about 8× what the OGG took. You're trading disk for a format that tools actually accept. One honest note on this exact pair: OGG is already lossy, so moving to WAV cannot restore detail the OGG 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
Can I convert OGG to WAV 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 OGG
Open-source compressed format. Better quality than MP3 at similar bitrates. Used in gaming and web applications.
About WAV
Uncompressed audio format. Perfect quality with no data loss. Standard for music production and professional audio work.