TTA to WAV

Convert TTA audio to WAV right in your browser, nothing uploaded.

Drag & drop your TTA files here, or click to choose. Everything runs in your browser — nothing is uploaded.

TTA (True Audio) is a free, open lossless codec, but it is also one of the most obscure audio formats around: almost no phone, music app or car stereo can open a .tta file, which is why most people end up converting it. WAV is the opposite problem solved: uncompressed PCM audio that plays everywhere, from Windows and macOS to iPhone, Android and every audio editor. Because both formats are lossless, converting TTA to WAV keeps your audio exactly as it was. This converter runs entirely inside your browser using a WebAssembly build of FFmpeg, so your files are never uploaded to any server. It is free, needs no signup or install, adds no watermark, and you can drop in several TTA files at once and convert them one after another.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert TTA to WAV?

Drag and drop your TTA files onto the drop area on this page, or click it to choose them. Conversion to WAV starts automatically as soon as the files are added, and each finished file appears as a row showing its new filename, its size, an audio preview player, and a Download button. You can add several TTA files at once. They are processed one after another right in your browser using a WebAssembly build of FFmpeg, so nothing is ever uploaded to a server.

Does converting TTA to WAV lose any quality?

No. TTA and WAV are both lossless formats, so converting TTA to WAV preserves your audio exactly and nothing is discarded or re-encoded in a lossy way. TTA is simply a compressed way of storing the same PCM samples that WAV stores uncompressed, so the decoded sound is identical. The only real change is file size, since removing the lossless compression makes the WAV noticeably bigger than the original TTA.

Why won't my TTA file play on my phone or music app?

TTA (True Audio) is a free open lossless codec that never achieved wide adoption, so almost nothing plays it: iPhones, most Android music apps, car stereos and standard media players simply do not recognise a .tta file. That obscurity, rather than any problem with the file itself, is the usual reason people convert TTA in the first place. Converting to WAV gives you a format that essentially every device, player and audio editor supports out of the box.

Is this TTA to WAV converter really free, and do I need an account?

Yes, it is completely free with no signup, no account, no watermark and no software to install. You just open the page in a browser and convert as many TTA files as you like. The only download involved is the converter engine itself, a one-time roughly 32 MB WebAssembly build of FFmpeg that your browser caches after the first conversion, so every conversion after that starts instantly.

Are my files uploaded, and is there a file size limit?

Your files are never uploaded. The conversion runs 100% inside your own browser, so the audio never leaves your device and the tool is safe for private, confidential or unreleased recordings. Because there is no upload, there is also no transfer wait, no queue and no file-size cap imposed by the site, only whatever your device's memory can handle. Very large files, roughly a few hundred MB and up, can be slow or run out of memory on a phone.

Why is my WAV file so much bigger than the TTA, and should I use FLAC instead?

WAV is uncompressed PCM, so it stores every sample raw at around 10 MB per minute for CD-quality stereo, while TTA compresses those same samples losslessly. If you want identical audio in a smaller file, convert your TTA to FLAC instead, which is also lossless but roughly 50-60% of WAV's size. Choose WAV when you need maximum compatibility or are importing into an audio editor, and FLAC when you are archiving or want to save space.

Does it work on Mac, iPhone and Android?

Yes. The converter works in any modern browser on Windows, Mac, Linux, iPhone and Android, with nothing to install on any of them. Since everything happens in the browser, the finished WAV file is saved straight to your device's downloads once you tap the Download button. On phones, keep in mind that long or large TTA recordings can exhaust mobile memory, so a desktop browser is the safer choice for big files.