MP4 to FLAC Converter

Extract lossless FLAC audio from MP4 videos online

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Settings

Set the number of audio channels. This setting is most useful when downmixing channels (e.g., from 5.1 to stereo).
Set the sample rate of the audio. Music with a full spectrum (20 Hz — 20 kHz) requires values not lower than 44.1 kHz to achieve transparency. More info can be found on the wiki.
Adjust the audio volume by selecting a number of decibels. For example, -10 dB decreases the volume by 10 decibels.

mp4

MP4 (MPEG-4 Part 14) is the most widely used multimedia container format in the world, standardized by the Moving Picture Experts Group as part of the MPEG-4 specification in 2003. Built on the ISO base media file format (MPEG-4 Part 12), which itself drew from the Apple QuickTime container, MP4 uses a hierarchical atom/box structure that can encapsulate virtually any type of media data. The container most commonly packages H.264 or H.265 video with AAC audio, though it also supports a wide range of alternative codecs including AV1, VP9, MPEG-4 Visual, AC-3, and ALAC. The design supports advanced features such as streaming hints for progressive download and adaptive streaming, chapter markers, multiple audio and subtitle tracks, metadata tags, and embedded thumbnail images. A standardized structure and broad codec support have made MP4 the default choice for online video platforms, mobile devices, digital cameras, and operating system media libraries. HTML5 video with H.264 in MP4 is supported by every major web browser, establishing the combination as the universal baseline for web video delivery. Efficient packaging overhead, combined with the compression capabilities of modern codecs it carries, enables high-quality video distribution at practical file sizes across bandwidth-constrained networks and storage-limited devices.
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flac

FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) delivers mathematically perfect audio reproduction at roughly half the size of an uncompressed WAV file. Maintained by the Xiph.Org Foundation and released in 2001, it quickly became the de facto open standard for lossless music archival. The encoder applies linear prediction to model each audio block, then codes the residual through Rice partitioning — exploiting the statistical distribution of prediction errors for strong compression without discarding data. Bit depths up to 32 and sample rates up to 655 kHz are supported, exceeding the requirements of high-resolution recordings. Hardware support is extensive: smartphones, car stereos, Blu-ray players, and virtually every desktop media application decode FLAC natively. Streaming services such as Tidal and Amazon Music use FLAC for lossless tiers, underscoring industry trust in the codec. Three standout benefits make FLAC compelling. First, complete bit-for-bit restoration of the original signal upon decoding. Second, embedded metadata via Vorbis comments and album art keeps libraries organized without sidecar files. Third, open-source licensing means no patents or royalties, removing legal friction for developers and hardware vendors.
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Lossless Audio Fidelity

FLAC preserves every detail of the original MP4 soundtrack. No compression artifacts, no quality loss — pure audio integrity.

Precision Settings

Adjust sample rate, bit depth, and channels before converting. Match your FLAC output to professional studio standards.

Secure Processing

Your uploaded MP4 is deleted right after conversion. The resulting FLAC file is removed from our servers within 24 hours.

How to convert MP4 to FLAC

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose flac or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your flac file right afterwards

About formats

MP4 (MPEG-4 Part 14) is the most widely used multimedia container format in the world, standardized by the Moving Picture Experts Group as part of the MPEG-4 specification in 2003. Built on the ISO base media file format (MPEG-4 Part 12), which itself drew from the Apple QuickTime container, MP4 uses a hierarchical atom/box structure that can encapsulate virtually any type of media data. The container most commonly packages H.264 or H.265 video with AAC audio, though it also supports a wide range of alternative codecs including AV1, VP9, MPEG-4 Visual, AC-3, and ALAC. The design supports advanced features such as streaming hints for progressive download and adaptive streaming, chapter markers, multiple audio and subtitle tracks, metadata tags, and embedded thumbnail images. A standardized structure and broad codec support have made MP4 the default choice for online video platforms, mobile devices, digital cameras, and operating system media libraries. HTML5 video with H.264 in MP4 is supported by every major web browser, establishing the combination as the universal baseline for web video delivery. Efficient packaging overhead, combined with the compression capabilities of modern codecs it carries, enables high-quality video distribution at practical file sizes across bandwidth-constrained networks and storage-limited devices.
Initial release: 2003
FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) delivers mathematically perfect audio reproduction at roughly half the size of an uncompressed WAV file. Maintained by the Xiph.Org Foundation and released in 2001, it quickly became the de facto open standard for lossless music archival. The encoder applies linear prediction to model each audio block, then codes the residual through Rice partitioning — exploiting the statistical distribution of prediction errors for strong compression without discarding data. Bit depths up to 32 and sample rates up to 655 kHz are supported, exceeding the requirements of high-resolution recordings. Hardware support is extensive: smartphones, car stereos, Blu-ray players, and virtually every desktop media application decode FLAC natively. Streaming services such as Tidal and Amazon Music use FLAC for lossless tiers, underscoring industry trust in the codec. Three standout benefits make FLAC compelling. First, complete bit-for-bit restoration of the original signal upon decoding. Second, embedded metadata via Vorbis comments and album art keeps libraries organized without sidecar files. Third, open-source licensing means no patents or royalties, removing legal friction for developers and hardware vendors.
Initial release: July 20, 2001

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert MP4 to FLAC?

FLAC provides lossless compression — every nuance of the original MP4 audio is preserved bit-for-bit, making it ideal for archiving and critical listening.

What software plays FLAC files?

VLC, Foobar2000, Winamp, and most audiophile players handle FLAC natively. Smartphones and streaming devices increasingly support it too.

Is FLAC really lossless?

Yes. Unlike MP3 or AAC, FLAC compresses audio without discarding any data. The decoded output is mathematically identical to the original recording.

Are FLAC files very large?

FLAC files are about half the size of uncompressed WAV but larger than lossy formats. The size trade-off is worth it for pristine audio quality.

Can I batch convert MP4 to FLAC?

Upload multiple MP4 videos simultaneously. Each audio track is extracted to a separate FLAC file, all processed in parallel.

Does FLAC support metadata tags?

FLAC has robust tagging support — artist, album, track number, and more. You can edit tags in any audio manager after conversion.

MP4 to FLAC Quality Rating

4.8 (8,848 votes)
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