audio Faster on WebGPU

Enhance Audio

Upscale low-quality audio to clean 48 kHz. Great for cleaning up phone recordings, Zoom calls, or old podcasts.

First run downloads ~15 MB. The model is cached after the first use, then runs offline.
Loading…

About Enhance Audio

Enhance Audio upscales rough, low-quality recordings to a clean 48 kHz output, smoothing out the muddy, compressed sound of phone clips and call recordings. Reach for it when a podcast guest called in over a bad line, or an old voice memo sounds thin. It accepts common audio formats and returns a WAV.

Category
audio
Input
Accepts: audio/wav, audio/x-wav, audio/mpeg, audio/mp3, audio/flac, audio/ogg or audio/webm.
Output
Outputs: audio/wav.
Cost
Free, runs in your browser
Memory
medium
Privacy: Enhance Audio runs entirely on your device. Files you provide never leave your browser — no uploads, no server, no tracking. The page works offline once loaded.

Common uses

  • Clean up a Zoom or phone-call recording before publishing it as a podcast segment
  • Restore an old, low-bitrate voice memo so it's easier to listen to
  • Improve a field interview captured on a phone mic in a noisy room
  • Sharpen a muffled lecture or meeting recording before transcribing it
  • Bring a compressed MP3 podcast episode up to a cleaner 48 kHz baseline
  • Make a quiet, dull webinar recording sound fuller before reuse

Frequently asked questions

What audio formats can I feed it?

WAV, MP3, FLAC, OGG, and WebM audio are accepted. The enhanced result is returned as a WAV file at 48 kHz.

Does it remove background noise?

It cleans and upscales the audio toward a clearer 48 kHz signal, which reduces the muddiness of low-quality sources; it's tuned for speech like calls, podcasts, and memos rather than studio mastering.

Is my recording uploaded?

The tool is listed as a free wyreup tool; it processes your audio without charging credits. Like the other browser-native tools, your file stays in your control.

Why is the output a WAV and not an MP3?

WAV is lossless, so the enhanced 48 kHz signal isn't degraded again by re-compression. You can convert it afterward if you need a smaller file.

Will a stereo file stay stereo?

The tool focuses on cleaning and upscaling quality to 48 kHz; for the best results use it on spoken-word material where clarity matters most.

Keywords

  • audio
  • enhance
  • upscale
  • super-resolution
  • restore
  • clean
  • denoise
  • hi-fi

Try next