WAV to FLAC Converter

Convert WAV to FLAC online at Convertig.com. Fast, free, and secure audio converter—no software required. Upload your file and get FLAC output instantly.

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 WAV to FLAC 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

WAV to FLAC Converter FAQs

The single biggest advantage is a significant reduction in file size without sacrificing any audio quality. Your WAV file is uncompressed and very large. The FLAC format uses smart, lossless compression to shrink that same perfect-quality audio into a file that is often 40-60% smaller, saving you a lot of storage space.

No, there is absolutely no loss of audio quality whatsoever. This is a lossless-to-lossless conversion. The final FLAC file will be a bit-for-bit perfect, sonically identical representation of your original uncompressed WAV audio. The sound is perfectly preserved.

FLAC works much like a ZIP file, but it is highly optimized for audio. It analyzes the digital audio waveform and finds efficient, mathematical ways to store it without discarding any of the original information. When you play the FLAC file, your device "un-zips" it in real-time, recreating the original, perfect sound.

You can typically expect your new FLAC file to be about 40% to 60% smaller than the original WAV file. For example, a 50 MB uncompressed WAV file will often become a 20 to 30 MB FLAC file, with the exact savings depending on the complexity of the audio itself.

While many modern audio editors support FLAC directly, WAV is still the universal standard for the editing process itself. A common professional workflow is to store your master audio files as FLAC to save space, and then convert them to WAV only when you need to actively edit them in your preferred audio software.