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OPUS to FLAC Converter — Free Online Audio Converter

Convert OPUS audio files to FLAC free online. In-browser FFmpeg, no upload, no signup. Fast OPUS to FLAC audio converter, batch supported.

How to convert OPUS to FLAC

Step 01

Drop a OPUS audio file. The first run downloads the FFmpeg engine (~30 MB).

Step 02

Pick the output settings — bitrate for OPUS, quality for OGG, no settings needed for WAV.

Step 03

Click Convert. Encoding happens in your browser.

Download the resulting FLAC file.

Looking for a fast, free online OPUS to FLAC converter? You're in the right place. Convert OPUS to FLAC in seconds — directly in your browser, without uploading anything to a server. Our free OPUS to FLAC converter has no signup, no watermark, no email wall, and no daily limit. Drop your OPUS file in, optionally tweak the output settings, and download a fresh FLAC file. Whether you need to convert a single OPUS or batch convert OPUS to FLAC for a whole project, this tool runs locally on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS and Android — same speed, same privacy, every time.

Free OPUS to FLAC converter — what does it do?

This online OPUS to FLAC converter takes MPEG-1 Audio Layer III (OPUS) files as input and outputs Free Lossless Audio Codec (FLAC) files. The conversion engine reads the OPUS bytes, decodes the structure, then re-encodes the same content into a valid FLAC file — all inside your browser, without ever uploading the OPUS to a remote server.

Because the OPUS to FLAC converter runs locally, it is genuinely free. There is no cloud cost to recover, no upload bandwidth to throttle, and no reason to limit how many OPUS to FLAC conversions you do per day. Most online OPUS to FLAC converters either upload your file (a privacy risk) or paywall batch conversion. This one does neither.

Common use cases: change OPUS to FLAC for compatibility with another app, prepare FLAC files when a website only accepts FLAC uploads, or convert a folder of OPUS images/files to FLAC so the entire project shares one format. The tool handles all of these without leaving your browser tab.

What is the OPUS format?

OPUS stands for MPEG-1 Audio Layer III. Standardized in 1993, OPUS powered the digital music revolution and is still ubiquitous in podcast distribution. It is a lossy compressed audio, primarily used for music and podcasts where small files matter more than perfect fidelity. If you have ever downloaded a OPUS file or saved one from your phone or camera, you have already worked with this format.

Strengths of OPUS: Universal hardware and software support, Tiny files at moderate quality, and Decades of mature tooling. These properties make OPUS a strong choice when those qualities matter most — and explain why OPUS files are still so common today.

Limitations of OPUS: Lossy — quality decreases with each re-encode and Patents finally expired in 2017 but legacy stigma remains. When these limitations get in the way, converting OPUS to FLAC is often the right move because FLAC addresses one or more of those weaknesses directly.

What is the FLAC format?

FLAC is short for Free Lossless Audio Codec. Released in 2001 and adopted as the de facto open lossless format, FLAC has become the standard for digital music collections. As a lossless compressed audio, FLAC shines when you need archiving CDs, audiophile listening, and lossless distribution. That is exactly why so many people search for a OPUS to FLAC converter every day — they want their OPUS content available as FLAC.

Why people choose FLAC: Bit-perfect quality at half the size of WAV, Open and royalty-free, and Rich metadata support. These advantages explain why FLAC has become a popular target format for conversion from OPUS and from many other formats.

Trade-offs of FLAC: Larger than lossy formats — not ideal for portable use on tiny devices and Limited support in some legacy hardware. Knowing the trade-offs ahead of time helps you decide whether FLAC is the right fit for your specific use case, or whether you should keep the original OPUS alongside the new FLAC copy.

Why convert OPUS to FLAC?

The most common reason to convert OPUS to FLAC is compatibility: a tool, platform, or person on the other side prefers (or requires) FLAC. Rather than asking them to install a OPUS viewer, it is faster to convert the OPUS to FLAC once and share the FLAC file instead.

The second most common reason is performance or storage. Converting OPUS to FLAC can produce smaller files, faster page loads, or better playback quality depending on the format pair — and our OPUS to FLAC converter exposes the quality options that let you steer the result.

Other reasons people convert OPUS to FLAC: standardising a mixed folder into a single format, preparing assets for an app or workflow that only accepts FLAC, archiving in a more durable format, or simply cleaning up an old library so every file is FLAC and easier to manage.

How does the OPUS to FLAC converter work?

When you drop a OPUS file into the upload box, the file stays on your device. JavaScript loaded by your browser reads the file's bytes, decodes the OPUS structure, and re-encodes the same content as FLAC. The output is then offered to you as a download. At no point does the OPUS file leave your computer or phone.

For image and document conversions the tool uses the browser's built-in Canvas, pdf.js, and pdf-lib APIs. For audio and video — including OPUS to FLAC conversions involving audio/video formats — it uses FFmpeg compiled to WebAssembly, the same engine that powers professional OPUS to FLAC workflows, but running locally inside your browser.

Because every step of the OPUS to FLAC conversion runs locally, performance depends on your device rather than on a queue of other users. Small files convert almost instantly; large OPUS files take longer but you do not share bandwidth with anyone. There is no upload step, so a slow internet connection does not slow you down.

Tips for the best OPUS to FLAC results

Start with the highest-quality OPUS you have. Each re-encoding from a lossy source loses a little detail, so a near-original OPUS produces a better FLAC than a copy of a copy.

Pick output settings that match how the FLAC file will be used. If the result is for the web, smaller files matter more than absolute quality. If the result is for archival, lean towards higher quality. Our OPUS to FLAC converter ships with smart defaults but every option has a tooltip explaining when to deviate.

For batch OPUS to FLAC conversion, use the multi-file mode (up to five files at a time). The interface accumulates files until you click convert, so you can drop a few OPUS files, fetch one from a URL, and even add one from a connected cloud account before kicking off the OPUS to FLAC conversion.

Frequently asked questions

Is the OPUS to FLAC converter really free?

Yes. The OPUS to FLAC converter is 100% free with no signup, no watermark, and no daily limits. It is supported by privacy-respecting display advertising, not by selling your OPUS or FLAC files or your data.

Is this a safe OPUS to FLAC converter?

Yes — and arguably one of the safer OPUS to FLAC converters online. Conversion happens entirely inside your browser. Your OPUS file is processed locally on your device and never leaves it. The resulting FLAC download is generated locally too. Nothing is uploaded, logged, or shared.

Will I lose quality when I convert OPUS to FLAC?

Some quality difference is possible because OPUS and FLAC encode information differently. Our OPUS to FLAC converter defaults prioritize visually identical results; the advanced options let you balance size against quality.

How big can my OPUS file be?

There is no fixed upper limit on this OPUS to FLAC converter, but the practical ceiling is set by your device. Phones and laptops with 4–8 GB of RAM can usually convert OPUS files up to a few hundred megabytes; desktops with more RAM go much higher. Closing other browser tabs before starting a large OPUS to FLAC conversion helps.

Can I batch convert OPUS to FLAC?

Yes. The OPUS to FLAC converter accepts up to five OPUS files in a single batch. Drop them all in, set your options once, and the converter processes them sequentially. When the batch OPUS to FLAC conversion completes, each FLAC file gets its own download button and a "Download all" option produces a ZIP archive.

Which browsers support this OPUS to FLAC converter?

Any modern browser released in the last few years works: Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Safari, Brave, and Opera. Mobile browsers on iOS and Android are supported too. The OPUS to FLAC converter uses standard web technologies (Canvas, WebAssembly) supported by all modern browsers.

Do you keep a copy of my OPUS or FLAC files?

No. We never see your OPUS or FLAC files in the first place, so there is nothing to keep. The OPUS to FLAC converter has no upload server, no file storage, and no logs that include file content.

Can I use this OPUS to FLAC converter on mobile?

Yes. The OPUS to FLAC converter is fully responsive and works on iOS Safari and Android Chrome. Drop a OPUS file from your phone's storage or camera roll, convert it to FLAC, and the FLAC file is saved straight to your downloads.

How do I convert OPUS to FLAC without losing quality?

Open this OPUS to FLAC converter, drop in your OPUS file, and either keep the high-quality default or push the quality slider higher. For best fidelity, choose a higher-quality preset; the OPUS to FLAC converter will produce a slightly larger FLAC file with maximum visible quality.