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MP3 vs M4A

MP3 and M4A are both lossy audio formats, but M4A is the newer and more efficient one. M4A typically uses AAC encoding, which sounds better than MP3 at the same bitrate. MP3, however, remains the most universally compatible audio format.

Quick answer

Use M4A (AAC) for better sound quality at the same file size, especially in Apple and modern ecosystems. Use MP3 when you need guaranteed playback on every device, old hardware, or any app without worrying about support.

MP3 vs M4A: side-by-side comparison

Attribute MP3 M4A
Typical codec MP3 AAC (sometimes ALAC lossless)
Quality at same bitrate Good Better
File size Small Slightly smaller for equal quality
Compatibility Universal Very wide (Apple-native)
Common use Everywhere iTunes/Apple Music, modern apps
Best for Maximum compatibility Quality-per-byte, Apple devices

What is MP3 and what is M4A?

MP3

MP3 is the original mass-market lossy format. Its compression is older and slightly less efficient than AAC, but its near-universal support across every device and program ever made keeps it the safest choice for compatibility.

M4A

M4A is an MPEG-4 audio container usually holding AAC, the successor to MP3. AAC delivers better sound quality at the same bitrate thanks to more advanced compression, and it is the default for Apple Music and iTunes. (M4A can also hold lossless ALAC.)

When to use which

Choose MP3

Choose MP3 when a file must play on absolutely any device, including older hardware, or in apps with uncertain AAC support.

Choose M4A

Choose M4A/AAC for better quality at the same size, particularly within Apple devices and modern apps that support it well.

Convert between these formats

Use our free, browser-based converters:

Frequently asked questions

Is M4A better than MP3?
At the same bitrate, M4A (AAC) generally sounds better because its compression is more advanced. MP3 wins only on universal compatibility.
Will converting MP3 to M4A improve sound?
No. Converting from lossy MP3 to lossy M4A cannot add back lost detail and may slightly degrade it. Convert from a lossless source for best results.
Does M4A work on Android and Windows?
Yes. M4A/AAC is widely supported on Android, Windows, and most modern players, though MP3 still has the broadest reach.

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