Audio Extractor is a free, browser-based audio extraction tool by Aibrify that pulls audio tracks from video files and exports to MP3, WAV, AAC, or OGG without uploading data to any server. Built for social media marketers and content creators who need fast, private audio extraction for podcasts, transcription, and content repurposing.
Why Extract Audio from Video?
Video files contain both visual and audio streams multiplexed together. Extracting the audio track lets you work with just the sound, which is essential for podcast repurposing, transcription workflows, music sampling, and content repurposing. Rather than re-recording, you can pull clean audio directly from existing video assets.
Use Cases for Audio Extraction
- Podcast Repurposing: Turn video interviews, webinars, and live streams into podcast episodes by extracting the audio and uploading to Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or any RSS feed.
- AI Transcription: Audio files are lighter and faster to upload to transcription services like Whisper, Otter.ai, or Descript. Extract first, transcribe second.
- Music Extraction: Pull background music or audio tracks from personal videos, presentations, or screen recordings for reuse in other projects.
- Content Repurposing: Convert marketing videos into audio snippets for social media, audiograms, or voice-over clips without re-recording.
Audio Format Comparison: MP3 vs WAV vs AAC vs OGG
Choosing the right format depends on your use case:
- MP3: The universal standard. Supported everywhere — every device, browser, and platform. Best for sharing and general use. Lossy compression keeps files small.
- WAV: Uncompressed, lossless audio. Much larger files but zero quality loss. Ideal for professional editing, music production, or archival.
- AAC: Apple's preferred format. Better compression efficiency than MP3 at the same bitrate. Used by YouTube, iTunes, and iOS devices natively.
- OGG (Vorbis): Open-source, royalty-free format. Excellent quality-to-size ratio. Widely used in gaming, web applications, and Linux ecosystems.
Tips for Best Audio Quality
- Match the output bitrate to the source — extracting at 320kbps from a 128kbps source just inflates file size without improving quality.
- Use WAV if you plan to edit the audio further, then export to MP3/AAC for final distribution.
- For podcast distribution, 128kbps MP3 is the industry standard — it balances quality and file size for spoken word.
- For music, use 192kbps or 320kbps MP3, or WAV for lossless preservation.
- Close other browser tabs during extraction — FFmpeg WASM uses your CPU, so freeing resources speeds up processing.