Private browser-based audio compression

Compress Audio to 100MB

Reduce large WAV, FLAC, podcast, lecture, or music files to a 100MB target in the browser.

Your audio is compressed locally in your browser. Files are not uploaded to a server.
MP3 / WAV / M4A / AAC / OGG / FLAC inputMP3M4A / AACOGG
File-
Size-
Duration-
Your audio is compressed locally in your browser. Files are not uploaded to a server.
Compression mode
Quick targets
Advanced settings
Select an audio file to begin.

Compression result

Original size-
Compressed size-
Saved-
Output-
Bitrate-
Download compressed audio

Practical focus

Use this page for large audio where the goal is staying within a broad upload limit, not extreme compression.

Quick tips

  • WAV and FLAC can shrink a lot when converted.
  • Already-low MP3 files may not shrink much.
  • Large browser jobs take longer.

How to use

  • Use Target Size mode at 100MB for large uploads, or lower if the platform limit is strict.
  • For large WAV files, convert to MP3 or AAC rather than keeping WAV.
  • For long lectures, use 96 kbps mono; for long podcasts, try 128 kbps.
  • If the source is already compressed MP3, check whether lowering bitrate is worth the quality loss.

Recommended settings

Source fileSuggested approach
Large WAVConvert to MP3/AAC
Long lecture96 kbps mono
Long podcast128 kbps
Music archive copy192 kbps
Already compressed MP3Check original bitrate first

Supported formats

Use MP3 or AAC output for large general-purpose files.

FLAC and WAV sources should be kept separately if they are masters or archives.

Quality vs file size

100MB is suitable for long files or higher-quality portable copies, but duration still matters.

WAV and FLAC sources often shrink dramatically when converted. Low-bitrate MP3 sources have less useful room to shrink.

Privacy and local processing

Compression runs in your browser, so the original audio is not uploaded to a server.

Large files can still be slow because decoding and encoding use your device memory and CPU.

Things to watch

  • Large local compression can be slow or memory-heavy in the browser.
  • If the file is already below 100MB, do not recompress unless you have a specific reason.

FAQ

Why compress audio to 100MB?

Some upload systems allow larger files but still reject very large WAV or FLAC sources.

Can browser compression handle large files?

Often yes, but speed and success depend on device memory and CPU.

What if my file is already under 100MB?

Keep it as-is unless you need a smaller sharing copy.

Should I reduce bitrate or change format?

For WAV or FLAC, changing to MP3/AAC usually matters most. For MP3, bitrate is the main lever.

Why does a large file take longer to process?

The browser must decode and re-encode the audio locally, which uses CPU and memory.