Voice Recordings Stuck in AMR Format?
You have voice recordings from your phone saved as AMR files, but your audio editing software won't open them. AMR (Adaptive Multi-Rate) is a speech-focused format designed for mobile phones and voice calls-not for editing or professional use.
Converting to WAV gives you uncompressed audio that works with every audio editor, DAW, and media player. In our testing, AMR to WAV conversion preserves the voice clarity while making files compatible with software like Audacity, Adobe Audition, and GarageBand.
How to Convert AMR to WAV
- Upload your AMR file - Drag and drop or click to select your voice recording
- Confirm WAV output - WAV provides uncompressed quality for editing
- Download your audio - Ready for editing in any audio application
No software installation required. Upload, convert, download-done in seconds.
Why Convert AMR to WAV?
AMR was designed for one purpose: compressing speech for mobile networks. It works great for phone calls but creates problems elsewhere:
- Limited compatibility - Most audio editors don't support AMR natively
- Lossy compression - AMR sacrifices quality for small file sizes
- Speech-only optimization - Music and ambient sounds suffer in AMR
- Narrow frequency range - AMR captures 300-3400 Hz, missing high and low frequencies
WAV is the universal uncompressed audio standard. Every audio application, operating system, and media player handles WAV files without issues. If you need to work with AMR files professionally, WAV is your best first step.
Common Use Cases
Voice Memo Editing
Recorded an interview or meeting on your phone? Convert to WAV before editing in Audacity or your preferred audio software. WAV preserves every bit of audio data for clean editing.
Podcast Production
Phone recordings make great podcast content when converted properly. WAV files import cleanly into podcast editing software without codec compatibility issues.
Voiceover Work
Captured a rough voice recording? Convert to WAV for professional post-processing. Audio engineers expect WAV files for noise reduction, EQ, and other treatments.
Archiving Recordings
WAV is a lossless format ideal for long-term storage. Unlike AMR, WAV files won't degrade if you need to re-edit or re-export them later.
AMR vs WAV: Technical Comparison
Understanding the difference helps you know what to expect:
- File size - AMR files are 10-20x smaller than WAV due to heavy compression
- Quality - WAV is uncompressed, preserving all audio data; AMR is lossy
- Sample rate - AMR uses 8 kHz (telephone quality); WAV typically uses 44.1 or 48 kHz
- Bit depth - WAV supports 16, 24, or 32-bit; AMR has fixed low bitrates
Converting AMR to WAV won't recover lost quality, but it unlocks compatibility with professional audio tools. For higher quality alternatives, consider AMR to MP3 for compressed playback or AMR to FLAC for lossless archiving.
Works on Any Device
Our converter runs entirely in your browser:
- Windows, Mac, Linux, Chromebook
- Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge
- iPhone, iPad, Android tablets and phones
No downloads, no plugins, no account required. Your files are processed locally and never uploaded to external servers.