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.wavaudio

How to send a WAV file.

WAV is uncompressed audio, the format that survives every round of post-production. The files are big. quik.space takes the WAV byte-for-byte, BWF timecode included, and gives the recipient a download link with inline playback where the browser supports it.

Drop your WAV audio here.

Free up to 100 MB. No signup, no email needed.

No email means no recovery. If you lose this link, we can't get you back to this file.

Price scales with file count, up to 25 files. Shown once. 7-day expiry.

What is a WAV audio?

WAV audio files use the .wav extension and the audio/wav MIME type. The format sits in the audio category. Typical files run 30 MB - 1 GB, which is well above what most email services will accept as an attachment.

Why you can’t email a WAV audio

WAV is uncompressed. A 5-minute song at 16-bit 44.1 kHz is roughly 50 MB. A multitrack stem at 24-bit 96 kHz can hit several gigs. Email is no help.Slack, Discord, and most other workplace tools have similar caps, often around 1 GB for free tiers and with aggressive per-channel storage limits. Even when the file fits, it counts against the recipient’s mailbox quota forever.

How quik.space handles WAV audio

quik.space stores the WAV byte-for-byte. Bit depth, sample rate, BWF metadata, and broadcast wave timecode all survive. The share page renders an inline audio player. The share page renders an inline HTML5 audio player, so the recipient streams the file before downloading the original.

The file lives for 72 hours by default and then enters a 7-day grace period. We do not train AI on your files. We do not share them with third parties. After grace, the bytes are permanently purged from storage. Read the full policy on privacy.

Common use cases

  • Send a 24-bit master WAV to a mastering engineer
  • Share a multitrack stem set with a remix collaborator
  • Hand off voiceover WAVs to a video editor
  • Pass a field recording WAV with BWF timecode to a sound designer

Frequently asked

Will sample rate and bit depth survive?
Yes. 24-bit 96 kHz stays 24-bit 96 kHz. 32-bit float stays 32-bit float. No conversion.
Does BWF (broadcast wave) timecode survive?
Yes. The WAV container is byte-identical, including the bext chunk.
Can I share multitrack WAVs?
Yes. For multi-file sessions, zip the folder or use a $2 bulk upload (up to 25 files).
What about inline playback?
The share page has an HTML5 audio player. Browser support for high-rate WAV varies; the download always works.

Related file types

Looking for size-based pages instead? See the pricing table or read the full FAQ.