Drop your FLAC file here
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Supports M4A and AAC files - Max 100MB
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Why Convert M4A to WAV?
FLAC is compressed lossless audio — perfect for storage. WAV is uncompressed lossless audio — the standard for editing, mastering, and pro audio software like Pro Tools, Logic Pro, and Audacity.
Convert M4A to WAV when you need to import audio into a DAW, send files to a mastering engineer, or use audio in software that doesn't natively support FLAC.
How to Convert M4A to WAV
Upload FLAC
Select your FLAC file
Choose Settings
Pick sample rate & bit depth
Convert
Click convert button
Download
Get your WAV file
FLAC vs WAV: Understanding the Difference
| Feature | FLAC | WAV |
|---|---|---|
| Compression Type | Lossless | Lossy |
| Audio Quality | Perfect (bit-for-bit) | Excellent (perceptually transparent at 320kbps) |
| File Size (1 min) | ~5-10 MB | ~1-2.5 MB |
| Device Support | Limited (audiophile devices) | Universal |
| Best For | Archiving, Hi-Fi systems | Portable devices, streaming |
What is FLAC?
FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) is an open-source audio format that compresses audio without any loss in quality. When you decode a FLAC file, you get the exact same audio data as the original source - bit for bit identical. This makes it perfect for archiving CD collections and for audiophiles who want the highest possible quality.
- check Perfect audio fidelity
- check Open-source & royalty-free
- remove Large file sizes
Why Convert to WAV?
FLAC and WAV are both lossless — quality is identical. The difference is workflow: FLAC is best for archival storage (smaller files, full metadata), while WAV is the standard for editing in DAWs, sending to mastering engineers, and using in software that doesn't read FLAC. Convert to WAV when you need maximum compatibility with pro audio tools.
- check Works on all devices
- check Much smaller files
- remove Lossy compression
Choosing the Right WAV Settings
When converting from FLAC, choosing the right bitrate is crucial. Higher bitrates preserve more audio detail from your lossless source.
Studio mastering quality. 96kHz/24-bit captures more dynamic range and frequency detail — the standard for professional mastering and high-resolution audio releases.
File size: ~2.5 MB/min
Best for: Hi-Fi listening, archiving
Great balance of quality and file size. Excellent for critical listening on good headphones or speakers.
File size: ~2 MB/min
Best for: Quality portable listening
Suitable for casual listening. Good for phone speakers, car audio, and background music.
File size: ~1.5 MB/min
Best for: Mobile devices, storage-limited
info Understanding Lossless vs Lossy Audio
Lossless (FLAC, WAV, ALAC)
Lossless compression reduces file size without discarding any audio data. Like a ZIP file for audio - when decompressed, you get the exact original. FLAC typically achieves 50-60% compression while maintaining perfect quality. Ideal for archiving and source files.
Compressed Lossless (FLAC, ALAC)
Lossy compression removes audio information that humans are less likely to perceive (psychoacoustic modeling). This achieves much smaller files (90%+ reduction) with quality that's often indistinguishable to casual listening. Perfect for portable use and streaming.
Pro Tip: Keep your FLAC originals as your master archive — they're 30-50% smaller than WAV with identical quality. Convert to WAV only when needed for a specific tool or workflow.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does M4A to WAV conversion lose quality? expand_more
No. Both FLAC and WAV are lossless formats — converting between them preserves 100% of the original audio data. Note that WAV files are typically 30-50% larger than FLAC because WAV is uncompressed.
What sample rate should I use for M4A to WAV? expand_more
For most use cases, keep the original FLAC sample rate (typically 44.1kHz or 48kHz) and bit depth (16-bit or 24-bit). For pro audio mastering, 96kHz/24-bit WAV is the standard.
What is the difference between FLAC and WAV? expand_more
FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) is compressed lossless audio — preserves 100% quality while saving 30-50% disk space. WAV is uncompressed lossless audio — larger files but universally supported by professional audio software like Pro Tools, Logic Pro, Audacity, and most video editors.
Can I batch convert multiple FLAC files? expand_more
Yes. Our converter supports batch processing. Upload multiple FLAC files and convert them all at once with your selected bitrate settings.
Will album art and metadata be preserved? expand_more
Basic metadata (artist, title, album) can be preserved using BWF (Broadcast WAV Format). However, WAV's metadata support is more limited than FLAC's. For full metadata preservation, keep your FLAC originals as the archive — but WAV is the standard for editing and mastering.