VQF Converter
Convert VQF (TwinVQ) audio to MP3, WAV, AAC and more for free online
Wide Format Selection
Convert VQF to 56+ audio formats. 56 conversion paths make this rare format fully accessible in the modern audio landscape.
Instant Usability
Upload, choose format, convert. The entire workflow takes moments and requires no familiarity with TwinVQ or legacy audio software.
Adjustable Output Quality
Fine-tune bitrate, sample rate, and channels before converting. Control whether the result optimizes for size, fidelity, or compatibility.
Yamaha Audio Innovation
VQF uses TwinVQ (Transform-domain Weighted Interleave Vector Quantization), developed by NTT and Yamaha as an advanced alternative to early MP3.
Privacy Protected
Your uploaded recordings are deleted after conversion. Output files are removed within 24 hours — no traces remain on servers.
Convert from Any Device
Works on all platforms — Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, iOS. A modern browser is the only thing required.
How to convert VQF file
Upload your VQF audio recording from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, or enter a direct link.
Pick a target format: MP3, WAV, AAC, FLAC, OGG, or any of 56+ available options.
Customize bitrate, sample rate, or audio channels for the output, or accept the default values.
Click Convert and download the finished audio when it is ready.
About format
Frequently Asked Questions
VQF (TwinVQ) was an early MP3 competitor that never gained widespread adoption. Converting to MP3 or AAC makes these recordings playable on all current devices.
Yamaha's SoundVQ Player was the original software for VQF. Today, converting to MP3 or WAV via Convertio is the most practical way to access the content.
Yes — free conversion is available on convertio.tools. Premium plans add larger uploads and faster processing for users with extensive audio archives.
Batch conversion is supported. Upload several VQF tracks, set output formats for each, and process them simultaneously.
VQF was designed to match MP3 quality at lower bitrates. Converting to MP3 at equivalent or higher bitrates preserves the same perceived audio quality.