Upload your M4A file exactly as your device saved it and get accurate, timestamped text back — no converter needed first.
M4A is what most people actually have: it is the default recording format on iPhones, iPads, many digital recorders, and the audio-only file Zoom saves after a call. Yet search for "m4a to text" and half the advice starts with "first convert your M4A to MP3" — an extra tool, an extra upload, an extra place your audio ends up. TranscribeBee skips that entirely: upload the .m4a as-is and get the transcript.
The result is real, formatted text — punctuation, paragraphs, timestamps, and separate labels for each speaker when there is more than one voice. Export it as TXT, DOC, PDF, or SRT, whatever your next step needs. A short memo or a two-hour recording both come back the same way: as text you can search and quote instead of audio you have to replay.
Skipping the conversion step is not just convenience. M4A is already a lossy format; re-encoding it to MP3 throws away more audio detail before transcription even starts, and free converter sites give no promise about what happens to the file you handed them. Here the original M4A is processed once, the transcript is produced, and the file is automatically deleted.
The .m4a file from your iPhone, recorder, or Zoom uploads directly. No re-encoding, no converter app, no second tool in the chain.
Punctuated paragraphs with timestamps, and speaker labels when the recording has more than one voice. Export TXT, DOC, PDF, or SRT.
Lossy-to-lossy MP3 conversion degrades audio before transcription, and converter sites keep copies on their terms. Upload once, here, and the file is auto-deleted.
Upload the .m4a file directly, choose the spoken language, and run the transcription. There is no need to convert it to MP3 or any other format first.
Both formats are lossy, so converting M4A to MP3 re-compresses the audio and discards detail the transcription model could have used. It also adds a second site that handles your file. Uploading the original M4A is faster and gives the model the best audio you have.
iPhone and iPad Voice Memos, QuickTime audio recordings, many handheld recorders, and Zoom’s audio-only meeting recordings all save M4A. If a file ends in .m4a, it uploads here directly.
Yes. The transcript includes timestamps throughout, and when the M4A contains more than one voice, the text is segmented and labeled by speaker.
$2 per audio hour with a $2 minimum, billed per file. There is no subscription — a single M4A costs a single small payment.
$2 per hour. No subscription. Files are auto-deleted after processing.