Free Online FLAC to MP3 Converter
Convert FLAC to MP3 — Portable Copies of Your Lossless Collection
You spent years building a FLAC library — ripping CDs, buying from Bandcamp, downloading from HDtracks and Qobuz. That collection sounds incredible on your home setup. But your car stereo does not read FLAC. Your old iPod does not either. And sending a 40 MB FLAC file to a friend is not exactly convenient. This FLAC to MP3 converter creates lightweight copies of your lossless music at whatever bitrate you choose, while your original FLAC files stay completely untouched. Think of it as making travel copies of your vinyl collection. The conversion runs in your browser — your FLAC library is never uploaded anywhere.
Drop files here or click to browse
Supports images, audio, and video files
When You Need to Convert FLAC to MP3
FLAC is the gold standard for music archiving — lossless compression at about half the size of WAV. But not every device and situation calls for lossless. Here is when a FLAC to MP3 converter saves the day.
Loading Music onto Your Phone Without Filling It Up
A FLAC album can easily take up 400-500 MB. Multiply that by a decent collection and you are out of phone storage before you know it. Convert FLAC to MP3 at 320 kbps and that same album drops to about 100 MB. Through your phone speakers or Bluetooth earbuds, you will not hear the difference — but your storage will thank you.
USB Drives for Car Stereos and Older Players
Plenty of car head units, especially anything more than a few years old, flat-out refuse to play FLAC files. Same goes for older iPods, Sandisk players, and cheap MP3 players. Change your FLAC to MP3 and suddenly your whole library works on every device you own. Just copy the MP3 files to a USB stick and go.
Sharing Albums with Friends Who Do Not Care About FLAC
Your friend asks for that album recommendation. Sending them a folder of FLAC files means a massive download and a format they might not even know how to play. Convert FLAC to MP3 and you are sharing files that open everywhere — phones, laptops, browsers, any music player. No explanation needed.
Why Convert FLAC to MP3 with videotoaudio.net
Desktop apps like dBpoweramp and foobar2000 can do FLAC to MP3, but they take time to set up and configure. This browser-based FLAC to MP3 converter keeps things simple.
Your Lossless Archive Stays Untouched
The converter reads your FLAC files but never modifies them. Your carefully curated lossless library remains exactly as it was. You get new MP3 copies alongside your originals — the FLAC stays as your archive, the MP3 goes everywhere else.
Handles Hi-Res FLAC from HDtracks, Qobuz, and Bandcamp
Bought 24-bit/192kHz hi-res FLAC from a music store? This converter handles those just as easily as standard CD-quality FLAC. No need to downsample first. The FLAC to MP3 conversion works regardless of bit depth or sample rate.
Album Art and Tags Come Along for the Ride
Your FLAC files likely have embedded album art, artist names, track numbers, and genre tags. When you convert FLAC to MP3, that metadata gets carried over to the MP3 output. Your music player still shows the cover art and track info — no manual re-tagging needed.
Convert Whole Albums and Keep Your Organization
Drop an entire album of FLAC files into the converter at once. Each track gets converted individually, preserving filenames and track order. Download them all as a ZIP and your folder structure stays clean — just like you organized it.
Ready for Car USB, Old iPod, or Any MP3 Player
The whole point of converting FLAC to MP3 is compatibility. The MP3 files you get here play on literally everything — car stereos with USB input, classic iPods, cheap gym players, Android auto, and any computer. Turn your FLAC into MP3 and forget about format support headaches.
Dramatically Smaller Files, Same Enjoyment
A typical FLAC album runs 300-500 MB. The MP3 version at 320 kbps comes in around 80-120 MB. At 192 kbps, it is even smaller. You are looking at a 70-80 percent reduction in file size. That matters when you are loading up a 16 GB USB stick or a phone with limited space.
How to Convert FLAC to MP3 — Three Simple Steps
Go from lossless archive to portable MP3 in under a minute, even for a full album.

Open the Converter and Add Your FLAC Files
Visit videotoaudio.net in any browser. Drag your .flac files from your music library folder onto the page — you can add a single track or drop in an entire album at once. The converter queues them all up automatically.
Choose Your MP3 Bitrate
MP3 is already selected as the output format. Pick the quality that fits your needs: 320 kbps for the best possible MP3 quality (great for careful listening), 192 kbps for everyday use on phones and in the car, or 128 kbps when you really need to save space. The setting applies to every track in your batch.
Download and Load onto Your Device
Hit convert and your MP3 files are ready in seconds. Download them individually or grab the whole album as a ZIP. Copy the files to your phone, drop them on a USB stick for your car, or sync them to your MP3 player. Your FLAC to MP3 conversion is done — the originals are still safe at home.
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FLAC to MP3 — Frequently Asked Questions
Does converting FLAC to MP3 destroy my original FLAC file?
No. The converter reads your FLAC and creates a brand new MP3 file alongside it. Your original FLAC is never modified, moved, or deleted. Think of it like photocopying a document — the original stays in the drawer. You keep the FLAC as your lossless archive and use the MP3 for portable listening.
I bought hi-res FLAC from Bandcamp — what MP3 bitrate should I make?
Go with 320 kbps. Hi-res FLAC files from Bandcamp are often 24-bit/44.1kHz or 24-bit/96kHz, which means there is a lot of audio information to work with. Encoding at 320 kbps lets the MP3 encoder capture as much of that detail as the format allows. If storage is tight, 192 kbps still sounds great through earbuds and car speakers.
Will the album artwork transfer to the MP3?
Yes, if your FLAC file has embedded album art, the converter carries it over to the MP3 output. The cover image gets stored in the MP3's ID3 tags, so your music player will display it just like it did with the FLAC. If the FLAC did not have artwork embedded, the MP3 will not have it either — you would need to add it afterward with a tagging tool.
FLAC to MP3 vs FLAC to AAC — which sounds better at the same file size?
AAC is generally considered a more efficient codec than MP3, meaning it can sound slightly better at the same bitrate. A 256 kbps AAC file often sounds comparable to a 320 kbps MP3. However, MP3 has near-universal compatibility — every device on the planet plays it. If you are converting for an iPhone or iTunes, AAC is a solid choice. For everything else, especially car stereos and older devices, MP3 is the safer bet.
Can I convert a whole FLAC album at once and keep the track order?
Yes. Drag all the FLAC tracks from an album into the converter together. Each file gets converted to its own MP3 with the original filename preserved. If your FLAC files have track number tags (which they almost certainly do if you ripped them properly), those numbers carry over to the MP3 tags. Download as a ZIP and the album stays organized.
My car stereo only reads MP3 on USB — how do I convert my FLAC library?
Just work through it album by album. Open the converter, drag in one album of FLAC files, convert to MP3, download the ZIP, and copy it to your USB stick. Repeat for the next album. At 192 kbps you can fit a huge library onto a 32 GB USB drive. It takes a bit of time if you have hundreds of albums, but each individual conversion only takes a few seconds.
Is there any real difference between 320 kbps and 256 kbps MP3?
Honestly, for most people and most listening scenarios, no. The difference between 256 and 320 kbps MP3 is extremely subtle and really only shows up on high-end headphones with well-recorded music. If you have the storage space, 320 kbps costs you very little extra and gives you peace of mind. If you are trying to fit more music onto a device, 256 kbps is totally fine.
What happens to the FLAC metadata (artist, album, year) during conversion?
The converter reads the Vorbis Comment tags in your FLAC files — things like artist, album title, track number, year, and genre — and writes them into the ID3 tags of the MP3 output. So when you open the MP3 in a music player, all that information should show up correctly. The mapping is not always perfect for obscure custom tags, but standard fields transfer cleanly.
Can I convert DSD files or only FLAC?
This converter is built for FLAC to MP3 conversion. DSD files (.dsf, .dff) use a fundamentally different encoding method called pulse-density modulation, and they are not supported here. If you have DSD files, you would need to convert them to FLAC or WAV first using a tool like dBpoweramp or foobar2000, and then convert that output to MP3.
How do I know if my FLAC is genuine lossless or just an upconverted MP3?
A real lossless FLAC file will have audio content up to 22 kHz (for CD quality) or higher for hi-res. A fake — a FLAC made from an MP3 source — will show a hard cutoff in the frequency spectrum around 16-18 kHz, because the MP3 encoding already removed those frequencies. You can check this by opening the FLAC in a free tool like Spek, which shows a spectrogram. If you see a sharp shelf where the high frequencies just stop, the FLAC was probably made from a lossy source.