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M4A vs MP2

M4A vs MP2

A detailed comparison of M4A Audio and MPEG Layer 2 Audio — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.

M4A

M4A Audio

Audio Files

M4A is an MPEG-4 audio container typically containing AAC or ALAC encoded audio. It is the standard format for iTunes purchases and Apple Music downloads.

About M4A files
MP2

MPEG Layer 2 Audio

Audio Files

MP2 (MPEG-1 Audio Layer II) is an audio compression standard that preceded MP3. It remains the standard audio format for digital radio broadcasting (DAB) and digital television (DVB) due to its lower encoding delay and better error resilience.

About MP2 files

Strengths Comparison

M4A Strengths

  • Superior audio quality to MP3 at the same bitrate (AAC codec).
  • Native support across Apple, iOS, Android, and Windows.
  • Carries rich metadata: album art, chapters, lyrics, podcast bookmarks.
  • Same container as MP4 — tooling overlaps with video workflows.
  • Lossless variant (ALAC inside M4A) for audiophile archiving.

MP2 Strengths

  • Robust against transmission errors — designed for broadcast.
  • Lower CPU demand than MP3 — mattered for 1990s receivers.
  • Universal playback via every audio player.
  • ~30 years of broadcast field experience.

Limitations

M4A Limitations

  • AAC patents still active in some jurisdictions — licensing fees apply for encoders.
  • Seeking in variable-bitrate M4As can drift without an index atom.
  • Less universal than MP3 on older hardware (pre-2010 car stereos, cheap MP3 players).
  • Container overhead is larger than a raw ADTS AAC stream.

MP2 Limitations

  • Worse compression than MP3 at the same quality.
  • Largely obsolete for new content.
  • Patent licensing never fully cleared (though most expired by 2017).
  • Consumer ecosystems chose MP3 and never came back.

Technical Specifications

Specification M4A MP2
MIME type audio/mp4 audio/mpeg
Extension .m4a (and .m4b for audiobooks, .m4p for legacy DRM)
Container ISO Base Media File Format (ISOBMFF)
Codecs AAC-LC, HE-AAC, ALAC
Max sample rate 96 kHz
Extensions .mp2, .m2a, .mpa
Standard ISO/IEC 11172-3 Layer II
Sample rates 16, 22.05, 24, 32, 44.1, 48 kHz
Bitrates 32-384 kbps

Typical File Sizes

M4A

  • 4-minute song (AAC 128 kbps) 4-5 MB
  • 4-minute song (AAC 256 kbps) 8-10 MB
  • 1-hour podcast (64 kbps) 28 MB
  • 4-minute song (Apple Lossless) 25-35 MB

MP2

  • DAB radio stream (128 kbps) 1 MB/min
  • DVD audio track (192 kbps) 1.4 MB/min
  • 3-min song at 192 kbps 4.3 MB

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Convert between M4A and MP2 online, free, and without installing anything. Encrypted upload, automatic deletion after 2 hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

M4A (MPEG-4 Audio) is an audio-only variant of the MP4 container, popularized by Apple in 2004 with the iTunes Store. Inside the .m4a wrapper is typically AAC (lossy) or Apple Lossless (ALAC) audio. The same container holds video when renamed .mp4 — only the track contents differ.

M4A files play on every Apple device natively, Windows Media Player, VLC, foobar2000, and most modern media players. Android supports M4A since version 2.0. On older car stereos and MP3 players, convert M4A to MP3 first — KaijuConverter does this in one click.

Use KaijuConverter's M4A-to-MP3 converter, or iTunes (File → Convert → Create MP3 Version). Free tools like Audacity, fre:ac, and ffmpeg also work. Note that converting lossy M4A (AAC) to lossy MP3 double-compresses — for best quality, use a higher MP3 bitrate (192 kbps or more).

M4A (AAC inside) sounds measurably better than MP3 at the same bitrate — AAC at 128 kbps is roughly equivalent to MP3 at 192 kbps. Use M4A when your target devices support it (every modern phone and OS); use MP3 for maximum compatibility with legacy hardware.

Older M4A files from the iTunes Store (before 2009) were DRM-protected — those .m4p files only play on authorized devices. Modern M4A is DRM-free. If an M4A refuses to play, check if it's actually ALAC (Apple Lossless) — some players only handle AAC inside M4A containers.

They share the same container format, but M4A holds only audio tracks while MP4 holds video (with or without audio). Renaming .m4a to .mp4 usually still plays fine — most players detect content by internal track metadata, not file extension.