Convert WAV to OGG in seconds, free and entirely in your browser. WAV is uncompressed PCM audio — lossless, but large; OGG wraps open Vorbis audio. Transcodr runs real ffmpeg compiled to WebAssembly, so your file is processed on your own device and never uploaded.
Drop files to convert
Video, audio, images, subtitles: anything ffmpeg can read. Drop them anywhere on the page or browse from disk.
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When you convert something, it’ll appear here. Clears on tab close — we don’t keep records.
Drop anywhere
Release to add to the conversion queue.
WAV vs OGG
Property
WAV
OGG
Compression
Uncompressed PCM
Lossy (Vorbis)
Fidelity
Lossless
Good
File size
Large
Small
WAV → OGG questions
Is the WAV to OGG converter free?
Yes. Transcodr is free with no accounts, watermarks, or hard limits beyond your device's available memory.
Are my files uploaded to a server?
No. The conversion runs locally via ffmpeg compiled to WebAssembly, so your WAV file never leaves the browser tab.
What quality is the OGG output?
OGG — Vorbis by default; use the quality control to trade file size for fidelity.
How do I convert WAV to OGG?
Drop your WAV file above (or click Browse) — the output is already preset to OGG — then click Convert and download the result.
01 / Engine
Real ffmpeg, compiled to WebAssembly.
Same library Netflix, YouTube, and basically every command-line video tool relies on, running in a Web Worker. Pipe a file in, run a command, pipe bytes back out.
02 / Privacy
Nothing leaves the tab.
No uploads, no accounts, no telemetry beyond an anonymous pageview. We couldn’t see your files if we wanted to — there’s no server in the loop.
03 / Limits
It is, after all, a tab.
Files up to a few hundred megabytes convert comfortably. Beyond that, your browser starts asking pointed questions. Use the desktop ffmpeg for 4K masters.