Practical focus
Use this page for iPhone voice memos, mobile recordings, and Apple-friendly M4A files that need to be easier to share.
Compress M4A audio from phones, lectures, meetings, and music clips with MP3 or AAC output options.
Use this page for iPhone voice memos, mobile recordings, and Apple-friendly M4A files that need to be easier to share.
| M4A source | Suggested setting |
|---|---|
| iPhone voice memo | MP3 or M4A, mono, 64-96 kbps |
| Lecture recording | MP3, mono, 64 kbps |
| Meeting recording | MP3, mono, 64-96 kbps |
| Music clip | MP3/AAC, stereo, 128-192 kbps |
| Upload size limit | Target Size mode |
M4A input commonly contains AAC audio from iPhone, iPad, macOS, voice recorder apps, and mobile exports.
Export MP3 for compatibility or M4A/AAC for efficient mobile playback.
M4A is often already compressed with AAC, so the remaining size reduction depends on original bitrate and duration.
Long voice recordings can still shrink a lot with mono and a lower bitrate. Music M4A should not be pushed too low because high-frequency artifacts become easier to hear.
Converting M4A to MP3 can improve compatibility, but it is still another lossy encode.
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.
Apple commonly uses M4A with AAC because it is efficient and works well on iOS and macOS.
Use MP3 when compatibility matters. Keep M4A/AAC when the file is mostly for modern phones or Apple devices.
64-96 kbps mono is a practical range for voice memos, meetings, and lectures.
Yes. Use the browser file picker, select the recording, compress it locally, and download the smaller file.
It can, because the audio is re-encoded. Choose a reasonable bitrate and preview the result.