Use our mp3 to wav converter to turn any MP3 into a clean, uncompressed WAV in a couple of clicks—perfect for quick edits, smooth mixing, or archiving in any DAW.
High-quality audio conversion made effortless — MP3, WAV, M4A, and more.
Fast processing, crystal-clear output, and support for every format.
Drag and drop multiple audio files, or click to browse
Supports: MP3, WAV, FLAC, AAC, OGG, M4A
Looking for a reliable mp3 to wav converter that feels like part of the studio, not a detour? This tool turns MP3 tracks into uncompressed WAV files built for editing, mastering, and archiving—without sign ups or watermarks, and with project smart defaults for sample rate, bit depth, and channels. Converting MP3 to WAV won’t “add” lost detail, but it stabilizes the file for precise processing in a DAW and avoids repeated lossy exports. Upload an MP3, select WAV, keep or tweak the recommended settings (44.1 kHz/16-bit for music (CD Quality), 96 kHz/24-bit for video (Studio Quality); 16 bit or 24 bit as workflows require), and download a clean, edit ready WAV that behaves predictably across plugins, meters, and session bounces.
Private by default • No watermarking • Download and done
WAV is lossless and uncompressed, so processors can work on the audio directly without adding any extra codec artifacts when you save. This makes it simpler to mix, edit, and master.
Teams want WAV files for stems and handoffs because when they work together, they don't want to deal with the confusion that comes from stacked MP3 re-exports.
For video timelines, 96 kHz WAV helps keep sessions aligned and avoids on the fly resampling surprises.
Converting MP3 to WAV does not restore frequencies or transients removed by MP3 compression. The benefit is workflow and compatibility, not "upgrading" the sound. Treat it like saving a compressed image as PNG: edits won't keep degrading it further.
Upload MP3: You can either drag and drop it or choose it from your device's storage. The tool knows the file right away.
Choose output: for music, choose WAV with the default settings for most projects (44.1 kHz, 16 bit stereo); for video, choose 96 kHz, 24-bit.
If necessary, change the sample rate, bit depth, and channels to match the DAW session so that the processing is clean.
Convert and download: get a WAV file that isn't compressed so you can edit and store it.
For music, use a sample rate of 44.1 kHz; for video, use 96 kHz. Only go higher if it really helps the pipeline. Resampling is necessary when there are mismatches.
Bit depth: 16 bits for delivery and 24 bits for processing headroom. Changing from MP3 won't add detail, but 24 bit can help the DAW do math.
Channels: For music, keep it stereo; for voice-only projects, use mono when it's right.
Podcast cleanup: import guest MP3s as WAV, then apply EQ, compression, and noise reduction without repeated lossy hits.
Mix and master prep: convert reference or legacy MP3s to WAV, edit, and export once to delivery format to avoid cumulative artifacts.
Video post: convert guide tracks to 48 kHz WAV so the audio timeline stays in sync with picture standards.
WAV files are much larger because they store uncompressed PCM. That size buys predictability in processing. Convert, edit, and keep the WAV as a project master—then export one final MP3 or AAC for distribution.
Use converters that you trust, read their policy on how long they keep files, and don't upload private audio to sites you don't know. Be careful with unexpected archives and scan downloads. A simple rule: handle important recordings the same way you would any other private document online.
Detected: MP3 - 44.1 kHz - Stereo — change to match session.
Settings hint: match the project rate; more isn't always better.
Privacy note: temporary processing, no watermarks.
Support for 3GP, MP4, AAC, and more—turn any audio or video file into a reliable WAV with one click.
Professional Audio Creation Suite
Quick answers to common questions about audio conversion and Echovox Studio. From formats and editing to speed and mobile use, everything is explained here. Take a moment to read through all FAQs to get the most out of your experience.
It changes a compressed MP3 into an uncompressed WAV so edits, mixes, and archives can happen without adding new compression each time; it speeds up the workflow but doesn’t magically improve audio that was already lost to compression.