Convert OGG Vorbis or Opus audio to MP3 for compatibility with legacy players and older devices.
OGG is great — it's open-source, royalty-free, and the audio inside (Vorbis or Opus) is often higher quality than MP3 at the same bitrate. The problem is reach: many car stereos, older phones, some hearing aids, and plenty of consumer audio gear still only handle MP3. If you have an OGG and need it to play somewhere it doesn't, converting is the fix.
The encoder decodes the Vorbis or Opus audio to raw PCM, then re-encodes to MP3. There's a small compound-loss penalty since both formats are lossy, but at 192+ kbps it's inaudible to human ears.
OGG is an open-source audio container that usually carries Vorbis or Opus audio — royalty-free alternatives to MP3 and AAC.
MP3 is the most universally compatible lossy audio format — plays on every phone, car stereo, and audio player ever made.
Drag a OGG onto the converter above, or click the box to pick one from your device.
We've preselected MP3 as the output format. Change it from the dropdown if you want a different target.
Click Convert and wait for the progress bar to finish. Download the MP3 when it's ready.
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