How To Convert FLAC to MP3

FLAC logo FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) is a lossless audio compression format. It’s often used to digitally store and transfer music without any loss in quality. The files tend to be rather large though – for example, 3 minutes of audio could take up around 18 Mb.

On the other hand, MP3 is a lossy compression format that is supported by pretty much any audio player (plus the files tend to be smaller). Sometimes you need to convert FLAC to MP3, e.g. to be able to play it on your iPod. In this post I’ll describe how you can do that.

I tried out several free FLAC to MP3 converters prior to writing this tutorial. According to my testing, dBpoweramp seems to be the best choice. So that’s what I’ll use here. However, if this converter doesn’t work for you, there are certainly other viable alternatives, e.g. Foobar2000.

Okay, on with the tutorial ๐Ÿ™‚ Here’s the step-by-step guide for converting FLAC to MP3.

  1. Install dBpoweramp Music Converter. You can download it here.
  2. Install the FLAC codec for dBpoweramp.
  3. Start up the dBpoweramp Batch Converter. Usually you can find the converter here : Programs -> dBpoweramp Music Converter -> dBpoweramp Batch Converter
  4. Locate the FLAC files you want to convert using the built-in navigator and tick their checkboxes. You can also select an entire folder (or several) by clicking the boxes near them. Click “Convert”.
  5. A conversion settings window will pop up. There’s a lot of options here, but don’t worry – in most cases you will only need a few of them. First, select “MP3 (Lame)” from the Converting To dropdown. Then set the quality and bitrate according to your preferences. And finally, choose where you want the MP3 files to be placed. Then click “Convert >>”.
  6. dBpoweramp will then convert the FLAC files to the MP3 format. Depending on how many files you’re converting, and the quality settings, this could take a few minutes.
  7. Congratulations! Now you can put the converted MP3’s on your iPod, or whatever ๐Ÿ˜‰
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174 Responses to “How To Convert FLAC to MP3”

  1. sayna says:

    i cant cut it into tracks

  2. Ryan Whittaker says:

    Thanks a lot fella, was trying to download a decent one for AGES. It really is appreciated.

  3. SeaSmith says:

    The step by step was great, but when I got to the last step the program did nothing. I repeated several times but that final box gave no indication it was converting anything. It also looked different than the one in the tutorial as it had two boxes where the status bar should have been that were listed as cpu 1 and cpu 2. Any thoughts?

  4. White Shadow says:

    It’s been a while since I wrote the tutorial, so it’s quite possible that the current release of dbPoweramp has a slightly different interface. Still, clicking the “Convert” button should have made it start conversion. If it didn’t then that’s probably a bug.

  5. musicbyLen says:

    Hey,

    I’m glad that I found your blog on this topic. I agree with your other reviews, the information you provided was very helpful and well written.

    I had a bunch of older flac files from months ago that I had forgotten about that I can now listen to on my iPod . . . . which is great!

    Thanks!
    Len

    p.s. Has anyone noticed a significant sound quality difference using the slower setting?

  6. Itzabo says:

    Excellent.

    DbPoweramp is excellent. It used all 4 cores (Q9550) and converted each song in seconds!!

    Set it to constant bit rate of 320.

    Thanks for a excellent Article.

  7. Onxycat says:

    Found you on Google. Went and d/l DbPowerramp and after a few false starts got it to work. Appreciate your help. thanks.

  8. HooK says:

    This is an awesome program. Converted 80 files (1.4GB) in 31 minutes. Thanks for turning me on to this

  9. rambiguous says:

    WOW!
    Although I only had 4 files to convert, this fantastic program made use of my dual core CPU and completed the conversion process in 50 seconds.
    Thank you.

  10. Lana says:

    This is awesome! Thanks! I ended up with .flac files by accident and was sure I was going to have to redownload in a different format, but this is super! Yay!

  11. nycboymusic says:

    I’m a macbook pro user.
    I went to Sourceforge.net
    downloaded
    max-0.7.1.tar.bz2
    dragged the max icon to my doc
    and the rest of the process was flawless.
    thanks so much.
    I’m grateful for quality.
    Rich….

  12. David Vanderschel says:

    There are free programs that do this very well. My way: Use Winamp to convert FLAC files to .wav files. (See Preferences->Output->Plug-ins->Output->Nullsoft Disk Writer.) Then use EAC to compress the .wav files. (See “Compress WAVs” on Tools menu.) It only takes a couple minutes to convert a whole album.

  13. Chad says:

    Thanks heaps! after googling and searching and trying four different FLAC-MP3 programs, with no luck (and lots of backward steps) I’m pleased to have found your blog. I can say with confidence… this is the first time in five years I have actually found a blog useful.

    Cheers, your instructions were dead easy as well. I’m now a huge fan of dBpoweramp.

    ๐Ÿ™‚

  14. Dylan says:

    it keeps saying that I have an error converting into mp3 because I need to purchase the thing… why didn’t you get that problem… why am I getting the problem….

  15. Brett says:

    Great writeup, and the dB Poweramp software is fantastic! Uses both cores (or all 4 on a quad core) and was able to re-encode about 200 MP3’s in less than 10 minutes.

    the instructions from this were dead on. The only thing I’m trying to figure out is how to keep the folder & file name structures.

  16. Very informative post. I’ve found your site via Google and I’m really happy about the information you provide in your articles. Btw your sites layout is really messed up on the Chrome browser. Would be really great if you could fix that. Anyhow keep up the good work!

  17. megan says:

    THANK YOU!! For once, I was able to do something on the computer by myself! I tried Winamp to listen to my music file – didn’t work. Then, tried a different converter that couldn’t pull up the files.. so, thank you !!!!

  18. Joel says:

    Works like a charm. Thanks!

  19. ade says:

    awesome
    that was really helpfull

  20. Margaret Flanigan says:

    Thank you! I converted my flac files and then I went back and got the ogg vorbis codex and now I’m converting those files too.

    This is so great! I had all this amazing music that I never listened to because it was in some oddball format and now I will be able to enjoy all of it.

    Your tutorial provided genuine enrichment in my life. Thank you so much for your generosity.

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