M4A Cutter
Cut and split M4A files from iPhone Voice Memos, interviews, meetings, and song ideas without converting formats first.
Upload audio
Upload the M4A right here and jump into the full cutter with the waveform ready for trimming, splitting, and export.
A lot of real-world recordings start on an iPhone. Voice Memos, quick interview captures, band ideas, and meeting notes often end up as M4A files. The problem is that many people assume they need to convert the file before they can edit it.
You do not need that extra step here. AudioMultiCut reads M4A directly in the browser, so you can move straight from recording to trimming, splitting, and exporting the useful clips.
Cut one long iPhone memo into the exact moments you want to keep, share, or archive.
Pull out quotes, requirements, and action items from spoken-word recordings without converting formats first.
Turn rough phone recordings into individual clips for bandmates, collaborators, or your own notes.
iPhone Workflow
Open the page on desktop or phone, drop in the file, and let AudioMultiCut decode it in the browser.
Use the waveform in the full editor to isolate one clip or several clips from the same recording.
Download the results as MP3 for easy sharing or WAV if you want a lossless editing handoff.
Privacy matters with phone recordings. AudioMultiCut keeps the processing local in the browser instead of sending the memo to a server just to cut it.
FAQ
Yes. AudioMultiCut works well with M4A files recorded in Voice Memos on iPhone. Upload the file in Safari or any modern browser, then trim or split it in the full editor.
No. You can upload the M4A directly. AudioMultiCut decodes it in the browser and lets you export your clips as MP3 or WAV afterward.
Yes. You can make several selections from one M4A file and export them all as separate clips in one session.
Yes. AudioMultiCut processes the file locally in your browser. The recording does not need to be uploaded to a server just to be trimmed or split.
Voice memos, interviews, lectures, meetings, songwriting ideas, rehearsal captures, and podcast raw takes are all good fits.
If the recording started on an iPhone, you can still edit it cleanly in the browser. Upload once, make the cuts, and export only the clips that matter.