Convert OGG to MP3
Convert OGG to MP3 free in your browser. No upload, no signup, no watermark. Files stay on your device.
drop a .ogg file
or click to browse
max 500 MBrelated
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how to convert ogg to mp3
Drop your OGG file
Drag your OGG file into the drop zone above, or click the box to pick a file from your computer or phone. The browser reads the file directly — nothing uploads.
Click Convert
The page runs ffmpeg.wasm on your device to decode the Ogg Vorbis and encode it as MPEG-1 Audio Layer III. Most conversions finish in a few seconds; large or codec-heavy files (RAW, video) can take longer.
Download the MP3 file
When the conversion finishes, the MP3 file is ready to download. Save it anywhere on your device.
FAQ
common questions
Why convert OGG to MP3?
OGG Vorbis is technically excellent but spotty in support outside Linux and open-source media players. iPhones don't play OGG natively, many car stereos and Bluetooth speakers don't recognise it, and most music apps prefer MP3 or AAC. Converting to MP3 unlocks the file for those destinations.
Will I lose quality?
Yes — both formats are lossy, so the converter has to decode the OGG and re-encode through MP3's compression, adding a generational lossy step. At default bitrates the difference isn't audible to most listeners; on critical equipment you might hear a slight thinning of cymbals or other high-frequency content.
How does the file size compare?
Slightly larger usually. OGG Vorbis is more efficient than MP3 per bit, so an OGG at 192 kbps sounds like an MP3 at 224 kbps. Converting the same content from OGG to MP3 at equivalent quality produces a slightly larger MP3. The size jump is minor for typical music (a few hundred KB on a 5 MB file).
Will my song metadata (artist, album, etc.) come through?
Yes. OGG uses Vorbis comments for tags; MP3 uses ID3. The converter translates between the two — all standard tag fields (title, artist, album, year, track number, album art) transfer cleanly.
Where will the MP3 play that the OGG wouldn't?
iPhones / iPads / Apple Watch (OGG support is iffy); most car stereos and head units; most consumer Bluetooth speakers; iTunes / Apple Music libraries; most DJ software; some smart-home audio systems. Basically anywhere outside the Linux / open-source media ecosystem.