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SOX vs TTA

SOX vs TTA

A detailed comparison of SoX Audio and True Audio Lossless — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.

SOX

SoX Audio

Audio Files

SoX (Sound eXchange) native format is used by the SoX command-line audio processing tool as an intermediate representation. It preserves full sample precision and metadata during complex audio processing chains involving multiple transformations.

About SOX files
TTA

True Audio Lossless

Audio Files

TTA (True Audio) is an open-source lossless audio codec that provides real-time lossless compression with hardware-friendly decoding. It achieves compression ratios similar to FLAC while maintaining very low CPU requirements during playback.

About TTA files

Strengths Comparison

SOX Strengths

  • Preserves full PCM precision between SoX steps.
  • Proprietary but documented format.
  • Useful as pipeline intermediate in audio scripts.

TTA Strengths

  • Lossless bit-exact reproduction.
  • Fast, low-memory decoding.
  • Open-source reference.
  • Cue-sheet support.

Limitations

SOX Limitations

  • Niche format — almost no tool outside SoX reads .sox.
  • Superseded in most workflows by WAV or FLAC for intermediates.
  • Rare in production deployments.

TTA Limitations

  • Compression ratio worse than FLAC.
  • Niche tooling.
  • Hardware support died with 2000s DAP era.
  • Eclipsed by FLAC.

Technical Specifications

Specification SOX TTA
MIME type audio/x-sox audio/x-tta
Extension .sox .tta
Codec Raw PCM (SoX's native intermediate)
Associated tool SoX (Sound eXchange)
Formats SoX handles 30+ (WAV, AIFF, FLAC, MP3, OGG, etc.)
Algorithm Fixed prediction + adaptive Rice coding
License LGPL

Typical File Sizes

SOX

  • 3-min PCM 16-bit stereo intermediate ~30 MB
  • 1-hour 24-bit intermediate ~1 GB

TTA

  • 3-min song (CD) 20-25 MB
  • Full CD album 250-350 MB

Ready to convert?

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

Frequently Asked Questions

SOX (SoX Audio) is an audio file format used to store sound recordings — music, voice, podcasts, sound effects. The format defines how the audio samples are compressed (or stored raw), what bitrates are supported, and how metadata such as title, artist, album, and cover art is embedded. It is part of the audio files family.

TTA (True Audio Lossless) is an audio file format used to store sound recordings — music, voice, podcasts, sound effects. The format defines how the audio samples are compressed (or stored raw), what bitrates are supported, and how metadata such as title, artist, album, and cover art is embedded. It is part of the audio files family.

VLC, foobar2000, and the default media players on Windows and macOS handle SOX natively. On mobile, iOS Music and Android media apps vary in their support — popular formats work everywhere; niche ones may need a dedicated app. If playback fails on a device, converting to MP3 or AAC usually solves it.

VLC, foobar2000, and the default media players on Windows and macOS handle TTA natively. On mobile, iOS Music and Android media apps vary in their support — popular formats work everywhere; niche ones may need a dedicated app. If playback fails on a device, converting to MP3 or AAC usually solves it.

Upload the SOX to KaijuConverter and pick MP3, WAV, FLAC, AAC, OGG, or any other target. Our FFmpeg pipeline decodes the audio and re-encodes to the target format at sensible default bitrates (VBR ~190 kbps for music, 96 kbps for speech). Metadata and cover art travel with the audio where both formats support them.

SOX can be lossy or lossless depending on the specific variant. Lossy variants (smaller files) discard some audio detail during compression in ways tuned to be inaudible; lossless variants preserve every sample exactly but produce larger files. For distribution, lossy at high bitrate is standard; for archival, lossless wins.