MOV-aware explanation
The container may hold AAC, PCM, ALAC, or another audio codec; conversion depends on the real stream.
Convert a QuickTime MOV from an iPhone, camera, or editor to MP3 at 128, 192, or 320 kbps. Trim locally in your browser without uploading the MOV.
Your video stays on this device. Processing starts only after you click Convert.
MOV to MP3
Turn a phone, camera, screen-recording, or editing export into a broadly playable MP3.
The container may hold AAC, PCM, ALAC, or another audio codec; conversion depends on the real stream.
HEVC, H.264, resolution, timecode, and image metadata do not become part of the MP3.
Extract only the answer, sound cue, or voice segment needed from a longer MOV.
Phone and camera workflow
Work from the actual file rather than a cloud sharing link.
Download the original from iCloud or another provider first; this converter does not fetch remote links.
Use 128 kbps for speech, 192 kbps for everyday recordings, or 320 kbps when music matters.
Confirm the intended microphone or camera audio is present before archiving or sharing the MP3.
Local media boundary
The selected clip is read and converted inside the current browser Worker.
Answers for iPhone files, codecs, metadata, quality, and local access.
Yes, when the actual MOV is available to the browser, is no larger than 500 MB, and contains an audio codec the WebAssembly build can decode.
The video stream is discarded. Success depends primarily on whether the audio stream can be demuxed and decoded.
No. The workflow creates a new audio file and does not preserve the MOV video track, captions, or camera metadata.
No. MP3 encoding is lossy regardless of whether the MOV source audio was uncompressed or lossless.
No. Save or download the MOV to the device first, then choose that local file.
MOV is a flexible container. A damaged file or uncommon embedded codec can be unsupported even though the extension itself is accepted.