MOV to MP3
Pull the audio track out of a QuickTime .mov file and save it as a high-quality VBR MP3 (around 190 kbps, ffmpeg quality 2). The video stream is discarded — this is the right tool when you want a podcast, lecture, music clip, or voice memo extracted from a MOV (the container most commonly produced by iPhones, Macs, and pro video gear). The conversion runs locally via ffmpeg.wasm, so your file never leaves your device. Performance depends on your CPU: extracting audio is typically faster than re-encoding video, but very long or 4K sources may still be slow. For best results keep inputs under about 500 MB.
Drop .mov file here
or click to choose
Privacy
Runs entirely in your browser — nothing is sent to any server.
Cost
Free. No sign-up, no watermark.
Supports
.mov → .mp3
Related tools
Tools that work with the same formats — most users open one of these next.
Audio Trimmer
Cut a clip from an audio file — MP3, WAV, OGG, FLAC, M4A, AAC.
MOV to MP4
Convert MOV (QuickTime) video to MP4 (H.264 + AAC) — free online.
MP4 to MP3
Extract the audio track from an MP4 video as an MP3 file — free online.
WEBM to MP3
Extract the audio track from a WEBM video as an MP3 file — free online.
AVI to MP3
Extract the audio track from an AVI video as an MP3 file — free online.
MP4 to MOV
Convert MP4 video to MOV (QuickTime) — free online, no upload.
Frequently asked
Is MOV to MP3 free to use?
Yes. MOV to MP3 is completely free with no sign-up, no watermark, and no usage limits. Toolsly does not charge for any of its tools.
Do my files and data stay private?
Yes — MOV to MP3 runs entirely in your browser using your device's CPU. Files and text are never uploaded to our servers, so your data stays private.
How does MOV to MP3 work?
Open MOV to MP3, drop in your MOV file, choose any options, and click Convert. Your browser does the work locally and produces a MP3 file you can save right away.
What's the maximum file size for MOV to MP3?
Because MOV to MP3 runs in your browser, the maximum size depends on your device's available memory. Most modern phones and laptops handle files up to a few hundred MB without issues.