OPUS to AMB Converter

Package OPUS audio into Ambisonic B-Format containers

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Spatial Audio Format

AMB is the standard for Ambisonic B-Format — produce VR-ready spatial audio from your OPUS files.

Immersive Audio

Create assets for 360-degree video and VR experiences from OPUS recordings in the correct spatial container.

Online Processing

No spatial audio plugins needed locally — the OPUS to AMB conversion runs on our servers.

How to convert OPUS to AMB

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose amb or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your amb file right afterwards

About formats

Opus is a versatile, open audio codec standardized by the IETF as RFC 6716 in 2012. It fuses two coding approaches — SILK for speech and CELT for music — into one algorithm that blends between them based on content type and bitrate. This hybrid design lets Opus outperform virtually every other codec across a wide range of uses: low-latency voice at 6 kbps, high-fidelity music at 128 kbps, and everything in between. It supports bitrates from 6 to 510 kbps, sample rates up to 48 kHz, and frame sizes as small as 2.5 ms, giving it the lowest algorithmic latency of any mainstream audio codec. Three advantages make Opus especially compelling. It is completely royalty-free and open-source, removing licensing barriers that hold back proprietary codecs. It achieves transparent quality at roughly half the bitrate of MP3 and beats AAC at equivalent rates. And its low latency makes it the mandatory codec for WebRTC, so every modern browser ships with an Opus decoder. WhatsApp, Discord, Zoom, and YouTube all rely on Opus for real-time audio.
Initial release: September 11, 2012
AMB files contain audio encoded in Ambisonic B-format, a full-sphere surround sound technique conceived by Michael Gerzon during the 1970s. Unlike channel-based systems such as 5.1 or 7.1, Ambisonics captures a complete three-dimensional sound field using spherical harmonics — first-order B-format consists of four channels: W (omnidirectional), X (front-back), Y (left-right), and Z (up-down). This representation is speaker-independent, meaning one recording can be decoded to any loudspeaker arrangement or binaural headphones without remixing. AMB files typically store uncompressed PCM data and are processed by tools like SoX or specialized plugins. A core advantage is spatial flexibility — creators produce one master file that adapts to stereo, surround, or immersive playback. The format also scales elegantly: higher-order Ambisonics adds channels for increased spatial precision upon the same mathematical framework. With the growth of virtual reality, 360-degree video, and spatial audio for gaming, Ambisonics has experienced a resurgence, adopted by platforms like YouTube for immersive media delivery.
Initial release: 1975

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert OPUS to AMB?

AMB stores Ambisonic B-Format audio for VR, 360-degree video, and immersive spatial audio production pipelines.

What opens AMB?

Reaper with ambisonic plugins, Audacity, VLC, and spatial audio tools from Meta and Google handle AMB files.

Does AMB create surround from mono?

No — AMB is a container. True ambisonic audio requires multichannel spatial source recordings.

Is the conversion lossless?

AMB stores uncompressed PCM. The OPUS content is decoded and stored without further compression.

Can I process a batch?

Upload several OPUS files and wrap them all in AMB containers simultaneously.