WAV Merger

Combine multiple WAV files into one. Free, client-side, no upload.

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WAV Merger

Merge WAV files into one. Free, client-side. Lossless output.

WAV (Waveform Audio File Format) is an uncompressed, lossless format that stores raw PCM audio. It's the standard in recording and editing because there's no quality loss. Merging WAV files is common in music production, podcast editing, and archival—you get one continuous lossless file. File sizes are large compared to MP3 or AAC, so WAV is best when quality and editability matter more than size.

When to use WAV Merger vs other formats

Use WAV when you need lossless quality for editing or archiving. Choose WAV over MP3 when you'll process the audio further or when you can't afford any quality loss. Use MP3 or M4A when you need smaller files for distribution or playback on portable devices. Use FLAC if you want lossless compression (smaller than WAV, same quality).

Compatibility

WAV is supported in all major DAWs, editors, and operating systems. Some very old or limited players may not support WAV; for universal playback, convert the merged result to MP3 or M4A. Ensure your WAV files use the same sample rate (e.g. 44.1 kHz or 48 kHz) when possible for seamless merging without resampling.

Quality considerations

Merging WAV to WAV preserves every sample—no re-encoding, no quality loss. If you merge WAV with other formats, the output may be WAV or a common format; any conversion can introduce loss. For pure WAV workflows, merge WAV-only for a single lossless result.

Example use cases

  • Combine recorded song takes or stems into one multitrack or mixdown in a DAW.
  • Merge interview or field recordings into one file before editing in an audio editor.
  • Join voice-over or narration segments into a single WAV for video or podcast production.
  • Archive multiple short recordings as one long WAV for storage or backup.
  • Create one continuous WAV from several recordings for high-quality mastering or delivery.

Powered by Web Audio API and optimized processing.

All audio formats (MP3, WAV, OGG, M4A, FLAC, AAC) · MP3, OGG, M4A, FLAC, AAC