Why Convert OGG to AIFF?
OGG files use Vorbis compression to keep file sizes small, but Apple's professional audio tools prefer uncompressed formats. AIFF (Audio Interchange File Format) is Apple's native uncompressed audio standard, making it the ideal choice when you need OGG files to work seamlessly in Logic Pro, GarageBand, or Final Cut Pro.
Converting to AIFF gives you a format that every Mac application recognizes instantly. No codec issues, no compatibility warnings-just clean audio that's ready for professional work.
How to Convert OGG to AIFF
- Upload your OGG file - Drag and drop or click to select your Ogg Vorbis audio
- Select AIFF output - Choose AIFF as your target format for uncompressed audio
- Download your file - Get your AIFF ready for Mac and professional audio apps
The entire process runs in your browser. No software to install, no account required.
Understanding the Conversion
OGG (Ogg Vorbis) is a lossy compressed format-similar to MP3 but open-source. AIFF is uncompressed and lossless, storing audio data exactly as recorded. When you convert OGG to AIFF, the audio is decoded from its compressed state and saved without any additional compression.
Important to understand: Converting from OGG to AIFF won't magically restore audio quality lost during the original OGG encoding. What you get is the same audio stored in an uncompressed container. The benefit is format compatibility, not quality improvement.
In our testing, a 3-minute OGG file at 128kbps (about 2.8MB) converts to an AIFF file around 31MB. That's the trade-off: larger files but universal Apple compatibility.
When AIFF Makes Sense
Logic Pro and GarageBand Projects
Apple's DAWs handle AIFF natively. Import converted files directly without transcoding delays or compatibility prompts. Your timeline stays smooth.
Final Cut Pro Audio Tracks
Video editors working in Final Cut Pro get better timeline performance with AIFF audio. The format integrates seamlessly with Apple's video ecosystem.
Archiving for Mac Workflows
If your entire setup is Apple-based, AIFF provides a clean archive format. Every Mac app recognizes it without plugins or additional codecs.
OGG vs AIFF: Key Differences
The formats serve completely different purposes:
- Compression - OGG uses lossy Vorbis compression; AIFF stores audio uncompressed
- File size - OGG is roughly 10x smaller than equivalent AIFF files
- Platform support - OGG works best on open platforms; AIFF is optimized for Apple
- Editing - AIFF handles better in professional DAWs with no re-encoding on export
- Metadata - AIFF supports embedded metadata better than standard WAV
Choose OGG for streaming and storage efficiency. Choose AIFF for Apple compatibility and professional audio work.
Alternative Formats to Consider
AIFF isn't your only option when converting from OGG:
- OGG to WAV - Similar uncompressed quality, better Windows compatibility
- OGG to FLAC - Lossless compression, smaller files than AIFF
- OGG to MP3 - Universal playback if you don't need uncompressed audio
For pure Apple workflows, AIFF remains the cleanest choice. For cross-platform projects, WAV or FLAC may serve you better.
Works in Any Browser
Convert OGG to AIFF on any device:
- Mac (Safari, Chrome, Firefox)
- Windows (Chrome, Firefox, Edge)
- Linux (Firefox, Chrome)
- iPad and iPhone (Safari)
No plugins needed. Processing happens locally in your browser for privacy and speed.