Video to audio

Video to WAV Converter

Convert MP4, MOV, WebM, MKV, or AVI video to 16-bit 48 kHz WAV in your browser. Trim locally, keep files private, and download without uploading.

Local conversion workspace

Convert video to audio

Your video stays on this device. Processing starts only after you click Convert.

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Video to WAV

Make an edit-ready audio file

WAV is large, simple, and predictable for post-production.

PCM output

The converter creates 16-bit, 48 kHz stereo PCM WAV for broad editing compatibility.

No extra lossy compression

WAV avoids adding MP3 or AAC artifacts before editing, although it cannot restore lost source detail.

Trim large outputs

Cut the required segment first because WAV size grows directly with duration.

Workflow

How to convert video to WAV

Prepare a clean intermediate file for editing or transcription.

01

Choose the video

Select the exact recording you intend to edit or transcribe.

02

Set the useful range

Trim silence, slates, or unrelated sections to reduce conversion time and output size.

03

Download the WAV

Import the result into your editor and keep the original video as the source of truth.

Privacy boundary

Sensitive recordings stay local

Meeting, interview, and client video remains on the device during WAV conversion.

  • No server queue
  • No account or watermark
  • One file at a time limits memory pressure
FAQ

Video to WAV questions

What WAV can and cannot do for quality and editing.

No. It prevents another lossy encode but cannot recreate information removed by AAC, MP3, or Opus.

PCM stores samples without perceptual compression, so size is determined mainly by duration, sample rate, bit depth, and channels.

48 kHz is the common production sample rate for video and is widely supported by editors.

Version one uses a predictable stereo output. Mono and custom sample-rate controls are outside the initial scope.

The output PCM is uncompressed, but the complete workflow is only lossless if the source itself has not already used lossy encoding.

Yes. The video and WAV remain in the browser; only normal page requests reach the site.