Online Audio Merger — Mix Tracks with Volume | LazyTools
Audio Tool

Online Audio Merger — Mix Tracks with Per-Track Volume Sliders

Mix multiple audio files simultaneously into one output. Each track has an independent volume slider (0–150%) so you can balance vocal over music, sound effects over narration or any multi-track combination. Furthermore, the crossfade slider applies fade in/out envelopes at the start and end of each track. Preview the mix before downloading as a single WAV file. No uploads, no account.

Per-track volume sliders (0–150%)Crossfade at track edgesPreview before downloadAuto-normalise to prevent clippingWAV output

How to use the Online Audio Merger (With Crossfade)

1

Add tracks to merge

Click "+ Add track" and select one or more audio files. Furthermore, each file appears in the track list with a volume slider. Add as many tracks as needed — there is no hard limit beyond device memory. Remove any track by clicking its × button.

2

Adjust per-track volumes

Drag each track's volume slider to set its level in the mix. Furthermore, the slider range is 0–150% — values above 100% boost a quiet track. The output is automatically normalised to prevent digital clipping regardless of the volume settings.

3

Set crossfade if needed

The crossfade slider applies a fade-in at the start and fade-out at the end of each track. Furthermore, this is useful when tracks have different lengths — shorter tracks fade out smoothly at their end while the longer track continues at full volume.

4

Preview the mix

Click Preview to hear all tracks playing simultaneously with the current volume settings. Furthermore, this lets you balance the mix before committing to the download. Adjust volume sliders and preview again as many times as needed.

5

Download as WAV

Click Mix & Download WAV to render and download the final output. Furthermore, the output length equals the longest track. Shorter tracks contribute silence after they end.

Audio merging versus audio joining

Merging plays tracks simultaneously — all tracks output at the same time, mixed together. Furthermore, joining plays tracks sequentially — one after another in a single file. The Audio Merger (this tool) creates a simultaneous mix. The Audio Joiner creates a sequential playlist.

Use caseCorrect toolReason
Vocal over music bedMergerBoth play at the same time — mix required
Narration with background musicMergerSame — simultaneous play with volume balance
Podcast segments with intro musicJoinerMusic plays first, then speech plays after
DJ track playlistJoinerTracks play one after another with crossfade

How audio mixing works

Mixing adds the sample values of multiple tracks together at each time position. Furthermore, if two tracks both have a value of 0.5 at the same sample, the mixed output has a value of 1.0 — full scale. Tracks with different volume settings are multiplied by their gain factor before addition.

Mixed sample = (Track1 sample × Vol1) + (Track2 sample × Vol2) + …
Vol (100%) = 1.0 gain factor (unity)
Vol (50%) = 0.5 gain factor (half amplitude)
Clipping = mixed sample > 1.0 — prevented by auto-normalise
Auto-normalise = divide all samples by peak value if peak > 0.98

Worked example: narration over background music

A content creator wants to merge a voiceover recording with a background music track:

TrackVolume settingReason
voiceover.wav (2 min)100%Primary content — full volume
background_music.wav (3 min)35%Supporting texture — below speech intelligibility threshold
Setting background music to 30–40% preserves speech intelligibility. Furthermore, use Preview to check that the speech is clearly audible above the music. With crossfade enabled, the music fades in at the start and fades out when the voiceover ends at 2 minutes. The remaining 1 minute of music then fades naturally.

What is audio merging?

Audio merging (also called mixing or summing) combines multiple audio tracks into a single output by adding their sample values together. Furthermore, this is different from joining — merged tracks play at the same time rather than one after another. Mixing is the fundamental operation of audio production.

Why per-track volume matters

Different tracks have different loudness levels. Furthermore, a voice recording and a music track typically have very different amplitude ranges. Without volume adjustment, the louder track dominates and the quieter track becomes inaudible. Per-track volume sliders allow each track to be balanced independently. Moreover, this basic mixing capability — previously only available in desktop DAWs — is now accessible in a browser tool.

Why browser audio merging matters

Most simple online audio tools only offer sequential joining. Furthermore, merging — the ability to play tracks simultaneously with individual volume control — was previously the exclusive domain of desktop DAW software. This tool makes the most common merging use case (voice over music) accessible in any browser. Moreover, for creators who do not work in audio production professionally, this removes a significant barrier to producing polished audio content.

Auto-normalisation quality protection

When multiple tracks are added together, the combined amplitude can exceed the maximum value. Furthermore, digital clipping — values exceeding 1.0 in a 0–1 normalised scale — causes harsh distortion. The auto-normaliser in this tool detects if the peak exceeds 0.98 and scales the entire output down proportionally. Moreover, this protection means you can set any combination of volume levels without worrying about clipping.

Frequently asked questions

The Audio Joiner places files one after another — the second file starts when the first ends. Furthermore, the Audio Merger plays all files simultaneously and combines their audio into one mixed output. Use the Joiner to create a playlist or podcast episode. Use the Merger to add background music under narration or combine two instrument recordings into one stereo mix.
The slider range extends to 150% to allow boosting of quiet tracks. Furthermore, if your voiceover is recorded at a low level and the music is loud, you can boost the voice to 150% while keeping music at 30% — creating a balanced mix. The auto-normaliser prevents the combined output from clipping regardless of the volume settings you choose.
The output length equals the longest track. Furthermore, shorter tracks contribute their audio for their duration and then fall silent for the remainder. If you want a shorter track to loop to match the length of a longer one, repeat it using the Audio Joiner first, then use the Merger. Moreover, the crossfade option applies a fade-out at the end of shorter tracks for a smoother finish.
Yes — add as many tracks as needed. Furthermore, all tracks are mixed simultaneously. There is no technical limit beyond device memory. Moreover, for complex multi-track mixing projects, a full DAW is more appropriate — this tool is optimised for two to five track mixes that are common in podcast production and simple content creation.
The output quality is limited by the lowest-quality input file. Furthermore, the tool decodes all audio files using the browser's Web Audio API and processes at the native sample rate of the first file. The WAV output is 16-bit lossless. Moreover, if any input is a compressed MP3 or OGG file, the compression artefacts of that file are preserved in the output — the merger does not improve source quality.

Related music tools

Audio Joiner

Join files sequentially instead of simultaneously. Furthermore, crossfade control blends files at the join point.

Audio Normalizer

Match loudness of individual tracks before merging. Furthermore, LUFS target presets are included.

Audio Cutter

Trim tracks to equal lengths before merging. Furthermore, fade controls prevent hard transients.

Waveform Visualizer

Check the merged waveform. Furthermore, export as PNG to verify the mix has good dynamic range.

Audio Speed Changer

Adjust track timing before merging. Furthermore, learning speed presets are labelled clearly.

Ringtone Maker

Turn merged audio into a ringtone. Furthermore, fade controls and iPhone M4R notes are included.

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