AudioUtils

OGG to WAV on Linux

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

OGGWAV

Drop your OGG file here or click to browse

OGG (.ogg) · 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.

OGG is lossy. Converting to WAV won't restore lost data, but gives you an uncompressed container for editing workflows. The output is identical regardless of which device or browser you use.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does converting OGG to WAV improve quality?

No. OGG Vorbis is lossy, so the original compression can't be reversed. The WAV output contains the same audio quality as the OGG source, just in an uncompressed container.

Why is the WAV file so much larger?

WAV is uncompressed. A 3MB OGG file might become 30MB as WAV. The extra size is the trade-off for universal compatibility with audio editors.

What about OGG Opus files?

This tool handles OGG files containing either Vorbis or Opus audio. Both convert to standard WAV without issues.

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.