WAV vs MP3: When to Use Each Audio Format
Compare WAV and MP3 for editing, archiving, publishing, and sharing.
The basic difference
WAV usually stores uncompressed PCM audio, while MP3 stores compressed lossy audio. WAV files are larger but easier to use in editing workflows. MP3 files are smaller and convenient for sharing.
When WAV is better
Use WAV when you plan to edit audio, preserve a master recording, or move files between production tools. It avoids another lossy compression step before editing.
When MP3 is better
Use MP3 when the final file needs to be small, easy to send, or playable on nearly any device. Podcasts, drafts, notes, and quick audio exports often work well as MP3.
Using Bylefian
Bylefian can create both MP3 and WAV from browser-decodable video or audio files. Because conversion runs locally, large WAV outputs may use more memory and storage space.
FAQ
Is WAV higher quality than MP3?
WAV commonly preserves uncompressed audio, so it avoids MP3 compression loss.
Why is WAV so large?
WAV stores much more raw audio data per second than MP3.