Convert OGG to MP3

Upload an OGG file and convert it to MP3 in your browser.

Why convert OGG to MP3?

Convert an OGG file when a device, audio player, editor, or other application does not support its original format.

The tool decodes Vorbis or Opus audio from the source file and encodes it as a 320 kbps MP3. Vorbis, Opus, and MP3 all use lossy compression, so converting can cause a small additional change in quality.

MP3 is widely supported, making it a practical format for sharing audio and playing it on older devices and applications.

Common reasons to convert OGG to MP3

Prepare audio for a car stereo or portable player, convert voice recordings for easier sharing, or create an MP3 copy for software that cannot open OGG, OGA, or Opus files.

Frequently asked questions

Can I convert both Vorbis and Opus audio?

Yes, provided your browser can decode the source file. The converter accepts supported OGG, OGA, and Opus files and creates an MP3 output.

What bitrate will the MP3 use?

The output is encoded as a 320 kbps constant-bitrate MP3. This setting is fixed and does not depend on the codec or bitrate of the source file.

A higher output bitrate cannot restore audio detail that was already removed from the source.

Does converting OGG to MP3 reduce quality?

A small quality change is possible because the audio is decoded and encoded again. Vorbis, Opus, and MP3 all use lossy compression.

The 320 kbps output limits additional compression, but the MP3 is not a bit-for-bit copy of the source audio.

Does the MP3 keep the original sample rate and channels?

The converter keeps the sample rate and number of channels when the source audio is already compatible with MP3 encoding.

Some files, particularly multichannel audio or Vorbis files with an unsupported sample rate, may be converted to stereo at 48 kHz.

Why convert OGG to MP3?

MP3 may work with devices or applications that do not support OGG containers, Vorbis audio, or Opus audio.

You do not need to convert the file if your current player already supports it.

Should I keep the original OGG file?

Yes, especially if it is the best-quality copy you have. Converting the MP3 back to OGG later will not restore information lost during MP3 encoding.

Where is my file processed?

Your file is processed in your browser and is not uploaded to a server.