AAC to FLAC Converter
Drop your AAC audio here
Convert AAC to FLAC — free, fast, server-powered
Audio is uploaded, converted server-side with FFmpeg, then auto-deleted after 30 min.
How to Convert AAC to FLAC Online
Drag & drop or click Browse. Max 500 MB. Supports audio and video input.
Choose bitrate preset or use the slider. Higher bitrate means better quality and larger file.
Click Convert, wait for FFmpeg processing, then download your FLAC file. Auto-deleted after 30 min.
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10 Formats
Why Convert AAC to FLAC?
Converting AAC to FLAC wraps your audio in a lossless container with better tagging support, useful for music library management.
About the AAC Format
AAC is a lossy audio codec that delivers better sound quality than MP3 at the same bitrate. It is the default audio format for Apple products, YouTube, and many streaming services. AAC at 128kbps is generally considered equivalent to MP3 at 160kbps.
AAC was developed as part of the MPEG-2 standard in 1997 and later enhanced in MPEG-4. Apple adopted it as the default iTunes and iPod format, which drove widespread adoption. Today it's used by YouTube, Apple Music, and most streaming platforms.
✅ Advantages
- Better quality than MP3 at equivalent bitrates
- Default format for Apple ecosystem (iTunes, iPhone, iPad)
- Used by YouTube, streaming services, and digital radio
- Efficient at low bitrates — great for voice and podcasts
❌ Disadvantages
- Less universally supported than MP3 on older devices
- Still lossy — not suitable for archival
- Patent-encumbered (though freely usable in practice)
- Some hardware players prefer MP3
About the FLAC Format
FLAC is an open-source lossless audio format that compresses audio without losing any quality. Files are typically 50-70% the size of WAV while being bit-for-bit identical when decoded. FLAC is the preferred format for audiophiles, music archival, and high-fidelity streaming services.
FLAC was developed by Josh Coalson and released in 2001 as a free, open-source alternative to proprietary lossless codecs. It has since become the standard lossless format, supported by streaming services like Tidal, Amazon Music HD, and Qobuz.
✅ Advantages
- Lossless compression — zero quality loss
- 50-70% smaller than WAV
- Open-source and royalty-free
- Rich metadata and album art support
- Supported by most modern music players and streaming services
❌ Disadvantages
- Larger files than lossy MP3/AAC (3-5x typical)
- Not supported by iTunes/Apple Music natively (use ALAC instead)
- Overkill for casual listening, podcasts, or voice recordings
- Limited support on some older portable devices
Frequently Asked Questions
Will FLAC improve my AAC audio?
No — FLAC preserves audio losslessly, but converting from a lossy source (AAC) cannot restore discarded data. The FLAC file will be larger but sound identical to the AAC.