Convert any audio to OPUS
Drop any audio file — get a OPUS file in seconds, in your browser. Multiple files at once, no upload on the fast path.
9,214+ audio files converted
Converting audio to Opus is one of the most common jobs people bring to a browser converter. Modern royalty-free lossy codec that outperforms MP3 and AAC at low bitrates. The standard for WebRTC voice and streaming chat. Because everything here runs locally with WebAssembly, your files never leave your device — there is no upload, no account, and no daily limit on the fast path.
Looking to programmatically convert any image to OPUS?
Same engine, available as a JSON API. Drop a file or URL via REST and get the converted audio back — no browser, no UI, no rate limits on paid tiers.
Fast response on common audio pairs
Webhook delivery for batch jobs
Dozens of audio format pairs supported
any image vs OPUS: how they compare
The numbers and capabilities at a glance, so you know what you're trading.
Opus
- Year released
- 2012
- Compression
- Lossy
- Lossless
- No
- Channels
- Multichannel
- Player support
- Wide
- Best for
- Voice & low-bitrate streaming
Accepted inputs
- AAC
- AIFF
- ALAC
- FLAC
- M4A
- MP3
- OGG
- WAV
- WMA
Best practices for Opus
Small choices that keep your output sounding right.
- Play the first converted file before batch-converting the rest, so you catch a wrong setting early.
- For Opus, choose a bitrate that fits the use: 192–256 kbps keeps most music transparent, 320 kbps for archival-grade lossy.
When NOT to convert to Opus
Cases where a different format serves you better.
When the file must play on older devices
Opus is not supported everywhere (Wide). For old phones, car stereos, or legacy software, MP3 or AAC is a safer choice than Opus.
The importance of a good audio conversion
Why getting any image → OPUS right matters more than you think.
Frequently asked
The basics everyone asks before dropping a track.
Convert any audio to other formats
Convert other formats to OPUS