CONVERT
OPUS → SND
Fast, secure OPUS to SND conversion. No registration required.
DRAG. DROP. DONE.
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Here is the short version — Opus is the modern low-latency royalty-free codec used in VoIP, streaming, and WebRTC. Hence the need for SND. Need a SND version of a OPUS recording for a podcast host, audio book platform or DAW that refuses the original container? Drop the file above and our encoder produces a clean SND you can drag straight into the destination tool. Metadata such as title, artist and cover art travels with the audio. Keep in mind Opus is the modern low-latency royalty-free codec used in VoIP, streaming, and WebRTC. And remember that SND is an audio format with specific trade-offs between file size, bitrate flexibility, and device support.
Opus Audio
Source formatOpus is a versatile, open-source audio codec optimized for both speech and music at very low bitrates. It is the standard for WebRTC voice calls and excels at real-time communication.
NeXT Sound
Target formatSND (NeXT Sound) is an audio file format originating from NeXT computers and later adopted by Sun Microsystems as the AU format. It stores audio with a simple header and supports various encodings from 8-bit mu-law to 32-bit floating point.
Why convert OPUS to SND
Opus Audio is great in its own niche, but NeXT Sound is either more universally playable or better suited to the device you are targeting. Converting lets you ship the audio without asking listeners to install a codec. The loss in quality between the two is negligible at sensible bitrates.
HOW TO CONVERT
OPUS → SND
Upload the OPUS
Drop or select your OPUS file. The upload is encrypted and the file is queued for conversion.
Transcode via FFmpeg
FFmpeg decodes the OPUS stream to PCM internally, then re-encodes as SND at the bitrate you select.
Download the SND
The SND is delivered as a direct download; metadata and cover art transfer automatically where possible.
Common Use Cases
Podcast distribution
Podcast hosts (Spotify, Apple, Acast) publish audio as SND when the workflow requires it; converting upfront skips server-side transcoding.
DAW ingestion
Pro Tools, Logic, Ableton and Reaper pull SND into projects without decode overhead, so scrubbing and waveform display are snappy.
Portable players
SND plays reliably on old iPods, car stereos, Bluetooth speakers and fitness trackers where OPUS support is spotty.
Voice memo sharing
Voice notes recorded as OPUS travel to phones and desktops as SND without recipients installing extra codecs.
Quality & Compatibility
Lossy-to-lossy transcoding (most cross-format audio jobs) loses a tiny amount of quality on each pass — usually inaudible at our default VBR ~190 kbps for music or 96 kbps for speech. Lossy-to-lossless conversions freeze the existing quality but cannot improve it; lossless-to-lossy is only as good as the target bitrate you choose.
Tips for Best Results
- Pick 128 kbps for podcasts and voice, 192–256 kbps for music, 320 kbps only if the audio will be edited further downstream.
- Keep the OPUS master alongside the SND — re-encoding a lossy format twice accumulates audible artefacts.
- For mono voice content, convert to mono SND explicitly to halve file size without any quality loss.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Lossy-to-lossy conversions (most combinations) re-compress the audio, which technically introduces some loss. At a 192 kbps or higher target it is inaudible on normal equipment. Lossy-to-lossless conversions freeze the existing quality but cannot improve it; lossless-to-lossy transcodes are only as good as the target bitrate you choose.
For voice content (podcasts, audiobooks, lectures) 128 kbps is indistinguishable from higher bitrates. For music, 192-256 kbps covers most listening; 320 kbps is the ceiling for SND and the right choice for audio you plan to edit further. Above that, prefer a lossless target instead.
Yes. Title, artist, album, year and cover art travel from the OPUS container to the SND container automatically where both formats support them. If a tag field has no SND equivalent, it is dropped silently. Use any tag editor (Mp3tag, MusicBrainz Picard) to fine-tune afterwards.
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Secure & Private Conversion
Your files are encrypted during transfer, processed in isolated containers, and automatically deleted within 2 hours. We never read, share, or store your data.