Audio Editing Tips & Guides
In-depth tutorials, format explainers, and workflow guides to help you edit audio faster — right in your browser.
How to Trim Audio Online in 3 Steps
Learn how to quickly remove unwanted sections from any audio file — no software needed.
Read Article →Joining Multiple Audio Files Together
Combine several tracks into one seamless audio file with AudioSlice's multi-file workflow.
Read Article →WAV vs MP3: Which Format Should You Use?
Understand the trade-offs between lossless and lossy audio formats for different use cases.
Read Article →Quick Podcast Editing Without Desktop Software
A practical guide to cleaning up podcast recordings entirely in the browser.
Read Article →How to Trim Audio Online in 3 Steps
Whether you're cutting silence from the start of a recording, removing an unwanted section in the middle, or isolating a specific clip from a longer track, AudioSlice makes the process completely browser-based — no software installation required, and your files never leave your device.
Step 1 — Upload Your File
Head to the AudioSlice Editor. Click the
upload zone or drag-and-drop your audio file. Supported formats
include MP3, WAV, OGG,
FLAC, M4A, and AAC. Once the
file is decoded you'll see its waveform rendered in the editor.
Step 2 — Select a Region
Click and drag directly on the waveform to highlight the region you want to act on. The selection will be highlighted in amber, and the time range will appear in the info bar above the waveform. You can adjust the selection by starting a new drag at any time.
Step 3 — Cut or Keep
Choose one of two editing modes:
- ✂ Cut Selection — removes the highlighted region and stitches the remaining audio together seamlessly.
- ⬛ Keep Selection — discards everything outside your selection, leaving only the highlighted segment.
Hit ⬇ Download when done to save your edited audio as a high-quality WAV file.
Tip: Use the Undo button (or Ctrl+Z) to step back through your edits without starting over.
Joining Multiple Audio Files Together
AudioSlice supports uploading multiple files at once and loading them onto the waveform editor in sequence — making it easy to assemble a longer track from several smaller clips.
Uploading Multiple Files
When you open the file picker or drag files into the upload zone, you can select multiple files at once. Each uploaded file appears in the file list with its name, duration, and channel count. Files are stored locally in your browser session — nothing is sent to a server.
Loading Files onto the Waveform
Click the + button next to any file in the list, or click the file row itself, to load it into the waveform editor. If you want to combine File A and File B, load File A first, make any edits, then use the Join & Export All button to download the merged result.
Removing a File from the List
Each file in the upload list has a red ✕ button. Clicking it removes only that file. You can also use the Clear All Files button to reset everything and start fresh.
WAV vs MP3: Which Format Should You Use?
Choosing between WAV and MP3 comes down to three factors: quality, file size, and intended use.
WAV — Lossless, Uncompressed
WAV files store raw PCM audio data with no compression. A 3-minute stereo track at 44.1 kHz / 16-bit depth will be roughly 30 MB. Every edit you make preserves full fidelity. AudioSlice exports in WAV to ensure you never lose quality during the editing process.
MP3 — Lossy, Compressed
MP3 uses psychoacoustic compression to reduce file sizes by 10× or more. The quality loss is often imperceptible at 192 kbps or above, which makes MP3 ideal for streaming, podcasting, and distribution. However, each re-encode introduces additional quality loss ("generation loss"), so editing in WAV then converting to MP3 at the end is the recommended workflow.
Which Should You Choose?
- Editing or archiving audio → WAV
- Sharing a podcast episode → MP3 @ 128–192 kbps
- Professional music production → WAV or FLAC
- Ringtones or mobile alerts → M4A / AAC
Quick Podcast Editing Without Desktop Software
Many podcasters don't need a full DAW like Audacity or Adobe Audition. For simple cleanup tasks — trimming silence, cutting filler sections, removing false starts — a browser-based tool is often faster.
1. Remove Long Silences
After uploading your recording, zoom into quiet sections of the waveform (flat areas near the center line). Select those regions and use Cut Selection to remove dead air without affecting the rest of the episode.
2. Cut Filler Words & Mistakes
Listen to the recording with the built-in playback, pause when you hear a mistake, note the timestamp, then use the waveform selector to isolate that region and cut it out. Use Undo if the cut sounds wrong in context.
3. Assemble Multi-Segment Episodes
If your episode has multiple recorded segments, upload them all, load each in sequence, trim, and use Join & Export All to merge them into a final deliverable.
AudioSlice processes everything in your browser using the Web Audio API — your recordings are never uploaded to any server, keeping your content private.