Audio Merger

Combine multiple audio clips into one longer WAV file with straightforward sequencing controls.

Drop two or more audio files here to merge them

The add-files area now sits directly below the page title and description so users can begin immediately.

Choose audio files

Best results usually come from clips with similar loudness, source quality, and sample rates.

You can also drag and drop files here

1

Add your clips

Drop multiple files right under the heading to start the sequence.

2

Arrange the order

Move the clips until the final playback order feels right.

3

Export one file

Download a single WAV after the merge is complete.

Sequential clip assembly

Merge songs, intros, voice notes, and clips into one longer WAV export.

The merger is built for straightforward sequencing. Add files, move them into the right order, and export one joined track. The page copy now explains that matching source quality and sample rates still gives the smoothest results.

Simple ordering controls

Move tracks up or down until the playback order matches your intended sequence.

Clearer expectation setting

The support copy now avoids overpromising advanced mastering or automatic polish between very different source files.

Good for lightweight assembly

It is useful for combining clips, reminders, meditations, and short audio segments.

Generated illustration of several audio clips combining into one continuous track.

Supported workflows

MP3 merge workflowWAV merge workflowM4A merge workflowMixed clip sequencing

The page now explains the merger as a sequencing tool rather than a full mastering workflow.

Users get clearer guidance on source prep before they combine clips.

The merger now sits inside a stronger internal-link cluster with trimming and loudness support.

How the workflow works

1

Add at least two audio files

Upload the clips you want to combine into one timeline.

2

Reorder the stack

Move tracks up or down so the playback order matches the final result.

3

Export one joined file

Generate a single WAV download for previewing or further editing.

Common use cases

These sections are written for both search visibility and real user clarity, so each page explains why someone would choose this tool instead of a heavier editor.

Podcast intros and outros

Join branded intros, interview excerpts, and outros in a simple browser flow.

Meditation and focus mixes

Combine ambience, spoken guidance, and music into one longer playback file.

Song mashup drafts

Assemble a rough sequence before taking the idea into a deeper editor.

FAQ

Will the merger automatically normalize or master every file?

No. It is best used for sequencing clips together. If your sources vary a lot in loudness or quality, you may want to trim or adjust them first.

What output format do I get?

The merger exports a WAV file in the current implementation.

Do matching sample rates help?

Yes. Similar source settings usually give the cleanest and most predictable result in lightweight browser merging workflows.