Why udio users use these
Udio export is MP3 by default, which is fine for casual sharing but creates a dead end if you want to master, sample, or distribute the track properly. Converting to WAV unlocks DAW import, lossless editing, and a clean signal path through any mastering chain. From there you can fix loudness, trim, and re-encode for whichever platform you're shipping to.
The lineup
Convert MP3 to 16- or 24-bit lossless WAV in seconds.
Open guide →Shift pitch up or down without changing tempo.
Open guide →Normalize loudness to a consistent target level.
Open guide →Turn an album into 30-second preview clips by energy.
Open guide →Auto-generate timed lyric videos from any audio.
Open guide →Udio currently exports MP3 only. For anything beyond casual listening, convert it to WAV first to get a DAW-friendly lossless copy. Then process from there.
Yes. Convert the MP3 to WAV, run the master, then encode to MP3 (or whatever your distributor wants) at the end. The free MixMasterAI mastering tool handles this end-to-end.
Choose a file or drag it here
Supports WAV · FLAC · MP3 · M4A · AIFF