HomeToolsConvert an Audio FileOGG to MP3

Convert OGG to MP3

Convert OGG to MP3 right in your browser — free, private, nothing is uploaded. One-click re-encode for compatibility.

Convert OGG to MP3 →

Free · Private — runs in your browser, nothing is uploaded

OGG (Vorbis) is a free, open lossy format with very good quality per byte — a favourite in games, open-source software and projects that want to avoid patent-encumbered codecs.

MP3 is the most widely supported audio format there is — a lossy codec that shrinks audio to a fraction of its uncompressed size and plays on virtually anything with a speaker.

Converting OGG to MP3 is a compatibility move: both formats are lossy, so the goal isn't quality — it's producing a file that fits sharing, podcasts and everyday listening. Expect the sound to stay essentially the same, with a small second round of encoding loss.

OGG vs MP3

OGGMP3
Compressionlossy — some detail traded for sizelossy — some detail traded for size
Codec / containerVorbis audio in an Ogg containerMPEG Layer III audio
Typical file sizesmall — comparable to MP3 at the same bitratesmall — about 1.4 MB per minute at 192 kbps
Best forgames, open-source pipelines and the websharing, podcasts and everyday listening
Strengthopen and royalty-free; good quality per byteplays everywhere; small files
Watch out forless at home in Apple's ecosystem than MP3 or M4Alossy — encoding discards some audio detail to save space
Compatibilitybroad, though Apple software often needs a third-party playeruniversal — effectively every device and app

How the conversion works

  1. Choose your OGG file (up to 10 MiB). The button above opens the converter with MP3 already selected as the target format.
  2. Pick a bitrate between 32 and 320 kbps — the default 192 kbps is transparent for most material, and values outside the range are clamped.
  3. Run the conversion and download the result — the output keeps your filename with a .mp3 extension. Everything happens locally: the page runs ffmpeg compiled to WebAssembly, so your audio is never uploaded to a server.

What to expect

Generation loss stacks. Re-encoding lossy OGG audio with another lossy codec adds a second round of loss. Keep the MP3 bitrate at or above the original's and avoid repeated round-trips between formats.

Embedded album art is dropped along the way: cover images ride along as a video stream, which audio-only outputs like MP3 can't carry.

FAQ

Will converting OGG to MP3 make my audio sound worse?

Marginally, in principle: both formats are lossy, so the re-encode adds a second generation of loss. At 192 kbps or higher it's rarely audible, but keep the original OGG and avoid converting back and forth.

What bitrate should I pick for the MP3 file?

The converter accepts 32–320 kbps and defaults to 192 kbps, which is a good balance for music. Use 128 kbps for voice where size matters and 256–320 kbps for archiving; when re-encoding from OGG, match or exceed the source's bitrate to limit further loss. Values outside the range are clamped.

Is my OGG file uploaded when converting to MP3?

No. The page downloads an ffmpeg WebAssembly build once, then converts your file locally in the browser tab — the audio never leaves your device. Input files up to 10 MiB are supported.

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