Convert OGG to WAV
Free online OGG to WAV converter. No signup required.
Drag & drop your file here
or click to browse
Max file size: 100 MB
Why Convert OGG to WAV?
Understand when and why this conversion makes sense for your workflow.
Converting Ogg Vorbis Audio to WAV Audio ensures your audio files work across the widest possible range of devices, players, and streaming platforms. Audio formats differ significantly in their compression algorithms, bitrate support, and metadata handling. Whether you're archiving a music collection, preparing tracks for a podcast, or optimizing audio for a mobile app, selecting the right output format is essential for balancing playback compatibility with sound fidelity.
Ogg Vorbis Audio has a known limitation: limited hardware support in many portable players and car stereos. In contrast, WAV Audio offers a key advantage: completely lossless with no compression artifacts whatsoever. While Ogg Vorbis Audio is commonly used for video game audio and sound effects, WAV Audio is better suited for professional audio recording and production.
MegaConvert processes your OGG file and delivers a properly encoded WAV output, preserving audio quality within the limits of the target format — free, instant, and private.
OGG vs WAV: Format Comparison
Side-by-side comparison of the source and target formats.
| Property | OGG (Source) | WAV (Target) |
|---|---|---|
| Extension | .ogg | .wav |
| Full Name | Ogg Vorbis Audio | WAV Audio |
| Compression | Lossy | Uncompressed |
| File Size | Varies | Large |
| Best For | Video game audio and sound effects | Professional audio recording and production |
| Browser Support | Wide | Wide |
How to Convert OGG to WAV
Follow these simple steps to convert your file in seconds.
Upload your OGG audio
Drop your .ogg audio file into the upload zone or browse to select it. Both short voice clips and full-length tracks work — typical Ogg Vorbis Audio files (under 100 MB) upload in seconds even on a slow connection. Album art and metadata in the file are read automatically.
Start the WAV encode
Press the convert button to start. The audio stream is decoded from Ogg Vorbis Audio into PCM, then re-encoded as WAV Audio at a quality preset that matches the source bitrate where possible. Sample rate, channel count, and bit depth are preserved unless the target format restricts them.
Wait for the audio to finish encoding
Encoding speed depends on the length of the audio and the codec. Short clips finish in a few seconds; full-length albums can take 30 seconds or so. We do not throttle conversions — the limit is just the encoder's natural speed on the underlying hardware.
Download your .wav file
When the conversion finishes, click the download link to save the new WAV Audio file to your computer. The file is yours — no watermarks, no expiration on the file itself, and no MegaConvert account is required to download it.
Tips for Converting OGG to WAV
Practical advice to get the best results from this conversion.
Why this conversion is worth doing
Ogg Vorbis Audio has a known limitation: limited hardware support in many portable players and car stereos. WAV Audio addresses this with a key advantage: completely lossless with no compression artifacts whatsoever. Converting from OGG to WAV is most worthwhile when this specific trade-off matters for the way you intend to use the file.
Match the format to the actual workflow
Ogg Vorbis Audio is most commonly used for video game audio and sound effects, while WAV Audio is the standard for professional audio recording and production. If your workflow is closer to the second pattern, converting makes sense. If you are still working in a context where OGG is the norm, converting may create unnecessary compatibility friction with collaborators or tools that expect the source format.
Watch for this limitation in the WAV output
WAV Audio has its own limitation worth understanding before you commit: very large file sizes (approximately 10 MB per minute for CD quality). After the conversion completes, open the WAV file and verify that this limitation does not affect your specific use case — for some workflows it is irrelevant; for others it can be a deal-breaker.
Understand lossy vs. lossless before converting
Converting from a lossy format like MP3 to a lossless format like FLAC or WAV does not restore lost audio data — it only changes the container. If you need true lossless quality, always start from an uncompressed or lossless source. Converting lossless to lossy, however, is a valid way to reduce file size for streaming or mobile playback.
Understanding OGG and WAV Formats
Learn about the source and target file formats to understand what happens during conversion.
Source Format
Ogg Vorbis Audio
audio/oggOgg Vorbis is a free, open-source lossy audio compression format contained in the Ogg multimedia container. It was designed as a patent-free alternative to proprietary formats like MP3 and AAC, and generally provides better audio quality than MP3 at equivalent bitrates. Ogg Vorbis supports variable bitrate encoding and is widely used in open-source software and gaming.
Advantages
- Completely open-source and royalty-free with no patent restrictions
- Generally superior audio quality compared to MP3 at the same bitrate
- Supports variable bitrate for optimal quality-to-size ratio
Limitations
- Limited hardware support in many portable players and car stereos
- Less widely recognized and adopted than MP3 or AAC
- Streaming support is less universal than other lossy formats
Common Uses
- Video game audio and sound effects
- Open-source software and Linux audio applications
- Spotify internal streaming codec (modified Ogg Vorbis)
Target Format
WAV Audio
audio/wavWAV (Waveform Audio File Format) is an uncompressed audio format developed by Microsoft and IBM, storing raw PCM audio data in a RIFF container. It preserves the full quality of the original audio recording with no compression artifacts. WAV files are commonly used in professional audio production where lossless quality is essential.
Advantages
- Completely lossless with no compression artifacts whatsoever
- Universal support in all audio editing software and operating systems
- Simple format that is fast to read, write, and process
Limitations
- Very large file sizes (approximately 10 MB per minute for CD quality)
- No native support for metadata tags like artist, album, or genre
- Impractical for streaming or portable device storage due to size
Common Uses
- Professional audio recording and production
- Master audio archival and studio workflows
- Audio editing and processing intermediate format
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about converting OGG to WAV.
Related Conversions
Explore other conversions related to OGG and WAV.