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MP4 to WAV Converter

Convert MP4 to WAV online for free and extract audio from video. Use this converter for music tracks, lectures, interviews, podcast source files, and listening without the video stream.

Converting MP4 to WAV extracts the audio track from the video and discards the visual frames. The result is typically 80–95% smaller than the source MP4 file and is suited for music players, podcast apps, or further audio editing.

Drop MP4 files here
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Max file size 10MB. Sign up for more.

About the output format

When WAV is the right output

WAV is uncompressed lossless audio — pristine but large (~10 MB per minute at CD quality). Convert to WAV when your destination is audio production (DAWs like Logic, Ableton, Pro Tools all use WAV natively), voice-over delivery, or when a broadcaster / stock-audio marketplace specifies uncompressed. Never for casual listening — file sizes make no sense.

Extract audio from MP4 into a clean WAV

Pulling the soundtrack out of a video means dropping every video frame and keeping only the audio stream — smaller file, listen-only content.

  1. 1

    Upload your MP4 file

    Files up to 10 MB on the free plan, up to 1 GB on Pro — enough for lecture recordings, music videos, podcast video versions, and screen captures. Long videos (hour-plus) need Pro because the audio track alone can push past the free ceiling.

  2. 2

    Pick the audio quality

    For voice content (interviews, lectures, podcasts), 128 kbps WAV is more than enough. For music, aim higher — 192 kbps for casual listening, 320 kbps if you want transparency to the source. The source can't go higher than it already is; if the video's audio was already 128 kbps AAC, exporting at 320 kbps just makes a bigger file.

  3. 3

    Convert and download

    Extraction is fast — a 30-minute video typically produces its WAV in a few seconds. Both the video you uploaded and the extracted audio are permanently deleted from our servers within 30 minutes.

What actually happens under the hood

A MP4 container holds separate video and audio streams. Extraction reads the audio stream, re-encodes it (or copies it, if the target codec matches) into your chosen WAV container, and throws away the video entirely. Metadata like title and track info carry over where the format supports it.

Things worth knowing

  • The audio can't be better than the source. Exporting to a high bitrate doesn't recover fidelity — it just wraps the same audio in a bigger file.
  • Videos can have multiple audio tracks. Some containers hold dubs, commentary, or 5.1 surround alongside stereo. The default picks the first (usually main) track; the tool page shows a selector when there's more than one.
  • Silent video → empty audio. If the source has no audio track, the extraction produces a valid but empty WAV. Check the source has sound before running the tool.
  • Copyrighted content still applies. Extracting audio from a video doesn't change who owns the content. Use it for content you have rights to.

When pulling audio out of MP4 is the actual job

Six scenarios where extracting audio to WAV solves a real problem.

🎧

Turning a lecture recording into a podcast

A recorded lecture, webinar, or class captured as MP4 carries hours of good audio and a static talking head. Extracting to WAV produces something you can listen to on a commute — much smaller, playable on any audio app.

🎵

Saving a music video's audio for your library

For music videos of tracks you own, extracting the WAV lets you add the song to your regular listening rotation without needing to keep the video around. (Do keep an eye on rights — extraction from third-party sources isn't a licence.)

🎙️

Publishing a video interview as an audio-only version

Recording a video interview and then distributing the audio-only version to podcast platforms is standard practice. Extracting to WAV gives you the podcast episode without touching the video edit.

📝

Sending audio to a transcription tool

Whisper, Otter, and every other transcription service accept audio directly. Uploading video wastes bandwidth and, in some cases, is rejected outright. Extract to WAV first, upload, get the transcript back in a fraction of the time.

📻

Prepping a ringtone or sound effect

Sound effects and short clips extracted from videos become WAV files ready to import into audio editors, DAWs, or ringtone makers. Video is unnecessary baggage for these use cases; extracting saves the round-trip.

💾

Archiving without the storage overhead

A 1 GB MP4 lecture recording carries maybe 60 MB of actual audio. If the video track is disposable — say, a talking head — extracting to WAV cuts storage by 90% while preserving the content that matters.

MP4 vs WAV: Side-by-side

Technical comparison of the two formats — useful for deciding which to use, or for confirming what changes during conversion.

Property MP4 WAV
Full name MPEG-4 Part 14 Waveform Audio File Format
Year introduced 2001 1991
Developer / standard body MPEG IBM / Microsoft
MIME type video/mp4 audio/wav
File extension .mp4 / .m4v .wav
Compression H.264 or H.265 codec Uncompressed PCM (typically)
Color / data depth 8/10-bit N/A (audio)
Max dimensions / size Codec-dependent (up to 8K) 4 GB file size limit (RIFF)
Transparency No No
Animation No No
Standard / specification ISO/IEC 14496-14 Microsoft RIFF
Best for Universal video compatibility — plays on every device Studio recording, raw audio, professional editing

About the MP4 Format

MP4 (MPEG-4 Part 14) is an ISO standard multimedia container format based on Apple's QuickTime file structure. It is the most widely supported video format in the world — capable of playing on virtually every device, browser, and platform without additional software. MP4 files typically contain H.264 or H.265 video streams paired with AAC audio, though the container can hold a variety of codec combinations.

MP4 is the default choice for video distribution across the web, social media, streaming platforms, and mobile devices. Its combination of broad compatibility, efficient compression, and reasonable quality makes it suitable for everything from casual smartphone recordings to professional video delivery. The main limitations of MP4 are its relatively basic subtitle support compared to MKV, and the fact that some advanced codec configurations may not be universally playable on older devices.

MP4 to WAV FAQ

Quick answers about compatibility, quality, metadata handling, and the most common reasons to convert MP4 files to WAV.

How do I convert MP4 to WAV online?

Upload your MP4 video file, choose WAV as the output format, and download the extracted audio after processing completes.

Why would I convert MP4 to WAV?

People usually convert MP4 to WAV to extract music, lectures, interviews, podcast audio, voice tracks, or background sound from video. WAV is usually chosen when uncompressed audio is better for editing.

Is MP4 to WAV the same as extracting audio from video?

Yes. In this workflow, the converter keeps the audio track and removes the video stream.

Will the WAV file be smaller than the original MP4 video?

Yes, in most cases. Removing the video stream usually makes the output dramatically smaller.

What audio quality will I get from MP4 to WAV conversion?

Output quality depends on the original audio track in the video and the target format you choose.

Can I batch convert multiple MP4 files to WAV?

Yes. Batch extraction is useful for lectures, interviews, podcasts, and media libraries.

Is it safe to convert MP4 to WAV online?

Yes. This converter uses temporary browser-based processing with automatic cleanup after conversion.

Video-to-Audio Guides for MP4 to WAV Converter

Read practical guides about extracting audio from video, choosing output formats, and handling media compatibility.