AAC to WAV Converter

Convert AAC to WAV online with Convertig.com. Free, fast, and secure audio converter—no software needed. Upload your file and get high-quality WAV output.

100 MB maximum file size and upto 5 files.

Make sure you have uploaded valid files otherwise conversion will not be correct

300+ formats supported

We support more than 25600 different conversions between more than 300 different file formats. More than any other converter.

Fast and easy

Just drop your files on the page, choose an output format and click "Convert" button. Wait a little for the process to complete.

How to use AAC to WAV Converter?

  1. Click the “Choose Files” button to select your files (up to 20 files at a time)
  2. Click on the “Convert” button to start the conversion
  3. When the status change to Done” click the “Download” button

AAC to WAV Converter FAQs

No, it cannot. While the WAV format is lossless, it cannot invent or restore audio data that was already discarded when your compressed AAC file was first created. The new WAV file will be a perfect, high-quality copy of your source audio, including any of its original imperfections.

The main purpose is to prepare an audio file for professional editing, mastering, or archiving, especially in a Windows-based environment. WAV is a standard uncompressed format that is very stable and easy for audio editing software to work with, and it prevents any further quality loss during the production process.

The file size increases so much because AAC is a highly compressed format, while WAV is completely uncompressed. Think of your AAC file as a ZIP archive of your music. The conversion process "unpacks" it into its raw, full-size audio data, and a WAV file stores that raw data directly, which takes up significantly more space.

No, you will not hear any difference between the two files. The WAV file you download will be a perfect audible replica of the AAC file you uploaded. It will not sound better or worse; it will sound exactly the same, including any subtle flaws the original AAC may have had.

That depends on your goal. You should choose WAV for maximum compatibility with virtually all audio editing software, as it's the most basic and widely supported uncompressed format. You should choose FLAC if you want the exact same perfect quality but in a smaller file size, as FLAC uses clever lossless compression to shrink the file by about half without losing any audio data.