Converting an MP4 file into an MP3 file is, in itself, a perfectly legal technical operation. The legality question hinges entirely on what you’re converting, not the act of converting.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not legal advice. Consult a lawyer in your jurisdiction for specific situations.
The simple framework
Ask yourself one question: Do I have the right to make a copy of this audio?
If the answer is yes, you’re free to convert. If the answer is no, the conversion may infringe on someone’s copyright — even though the conversion itself is technically harmless.
Cases where conversion is clearly legal
- Your own recordings. Videos you shot, lectures you delivered, interviews you conducted.
- Public domain content. Works whose copyright has expired or been waived.
- Creative Commons licensed content that allows derivative works.
- Content you bought a license for that permits format shifting.
- Personal backups of media you own — in many jurisdictions, “format shifting” for personal use is allowed.
Cases where conversion is clearly not legal
- Downloading copyrighted music from streaming services and converting it.
- Converting a friend’s purchased movie to share online.
- Distributing extracted audio to others without permission.
- Bypassing DRM (digital rights management) to make the conversion possible.
The YouTube question
This is the one we get asked most: “Can I convert a YouTube video to MP3?”
YouTube’s Terms of Service explicitly prohibit downloading content unless a download button is provided by YouTube itself. Even if the underlying audio is in the public domain, the act of downloading violates YouTube’s terms. That’s why MP4intoMP3 deliberately does not support pasting in YouTube URLs — we want you to be on the right side of the law.
If you have a legitimate license to a piece of music or video, get the original file from the rights holder and convert that. Don’t try to extract it from streaming.
Format-shifting rules around the world
| Region | Personal copying typically permitted? |
|---|---|
| United States | Generally yes (fair use) |
| EU | Mixed — varies by member state |
| UK | Restricted as of 2014 |
| Canada | Yes, with some restrictions |
| Japan | Yes for personal use |
| Australia | Yes for personal “format shifting” |
These rules change. Check your local laws if you’re unsure.
Why MP4intoMP3 is built for legal use
- We never download from streaming sites.
- We don’t store or share files.
- We provide ID3 tagging so you can credit creators properly.
- We have a clear DMCA policy.
Bottom line
The act of converting MP4 to MP3 is legal everywhere. What matters is the source. Use it for content you own or have permission to copy, and you’re golden. If you’re not sure about a particular file — don’t convert it.
Need to convert your own recordings? Open the converter →