OPUS OGG

OPUS to OGG Audio Converter

Drop your OPUS files — the OGG audio is generated in your browser in seconds. Multiple files at once, no upload on the fast path.

4.8/5

9,214+ audio files converted

From
To

Need your audio as OGG? Drop the files and they are re-encoded right on this page — no install, no sign-up, no queue. Typical OGG output is ~1 MB/min @128 kbps, and the work happens locally so your audio stays on your machine.

For developers

Looking to programmatically convert OPUS to OGG?

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

Side-by-side

OPUS vs OGG: 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

OGG

Year released
2000
Compression
Lossy
Lossless
No
Channels
Multichannel
Player support
Wide
Best for
Games & open-source apps
Heads up

Heads up before converting to OGG

What this specific conversion changes about your audio.

Re-encoding Opus to OGG stacks compression

Both Opus and OGG are lossy, so converting between them compresses already-compressed audio and can add artifacts. When possible, convert from the original lossless master instead of from another lossy file.

Best practice

Best practices for OGG

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 OGG, choose a bitrate that fits the use: 192–256 kbps keeps most music transparent, 320 kbps for archival-grade lossy.
  • Check that title, artist, album and cover art survived the conversion; some players cache old tags.
When to skip

When NOT to convert to OGG

Cases where a different format serves you better.

  • When the file must play on older devices

    OGG is not supported everywhere (Wide). For old phones, car stereos, or legacy software, MP3 or AAC is a safer choice than OGG.

Deep dive

The importance of a good audio conversion

Why getting OPUS → OGG right matters more than you think.

FAQ

Frequently asked

The basics everyone asks before dropping a track.