Merge Audio

Merge multiple audio files into one track for podcasts, mixes, or playlists. Local processing keeps audio private and exports consistent results.

No sign-inLocal processingPrivacy-first
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Why merge audio here?

Simple combining

Join multiple tracks into a single file.

Order control

Arrange clips before export for clean sequencing.

Local privacy

Audio stays on your device during processing.

How audio merging works

  1. 1

    Add multiple audio files.

  2. 2

    Arrange them in the order you want.

  3. 3

    Merge and download the combined track.

Use cases for Merge Audio

This page works best when you already know the workflow problem and need a focused browser tool instead of a generic editor.

Handle audio cleanup with Merge Audio

Use Merge Audio for quick soundtrack, voice-note, music, or podcast tasks that do not justify opening a full DAW.

Reuse extracted or recorded audio fast

It works well for browser-side polishing before publishing, attaching to video, or handing files to another teammate.

Compare settings quickly

This is useful when you want to test a few changes and export a local result without waiting on cloud processing.

Before you start

A quick preflight check usually avoids the most common false starts on browser-based exports.

Start from the original local file

Keep the untouched source nearby before running Merge Audio, especially if you plan to compare exports or test multiple settings.

Prepare the main audio file input

This tool expects a audio file file first, so confirm the browser can access the local source you actually want to process.

Settings guide

These are the controls most likely to change the final result or whether the export fits the target workflow cleanly.

Review the default path and export flow

Merge Audio keeps the setup light, so the main choice is usually file selection and the final download path rather than a long list of advanced controls.

Output expectations

These notes help you decide whether this page is the right endpoint or just one step before a later conversion.

Expect MP3 output by default

Merge Audio exports a MP3 file, so treat this page as a workflow tool first and a format chooser second.

A new export usually means a fresh encode

Most actions here create a new file, so small quality, timing, or size differences are normal even when the visible change feels simple.

Use Audio Converter when format is the real question

If the workflow is correct but the destination type is not, move to Audio Converter instead of forcing this page to solve a format-choice problem.

Troubleshooting

Most issues come from the source file, the export target, or a mismatch between the workflow problem and the tool you chose.

The browser rejects the file or export feels stuck

Check that the source really matches the expected audio file type and try a shorter or smaller sample first to isolate the issue.

The result is larger or softer than expected

That usually means Merge Audio solved the workflow problem but still had to re-encode the media, so compare settings before assuming the source was wrong.

This page solves the wrong problem

If the actual blocker is output format compatibility, email size limits, or subtitle handling, move to the dedicated converter, compressor, or subtitle workflow instead.

No, but matching formats can export faster.

No. Clips are joined seamlessly.

Yes, up to 2 GB total input size.

No. It preserves the original levels.

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