Free Online Audio Player
Play music files in your browser with a beautiful interface. Support MP3, FLAC, WAV, and more lossless formats.
Start Playing Now — It's FreeWhy Choose OnlinePlayer for Music?
Lossless Audio Support
Play FLAC, WAV, ALAC, and other lossless formats directly in your browser. Hear your music the way it was meant to be heard.
Beautiful Vinyl Interface
Enjoy a stunning vinyl record player animation that brings the warmth of analog to your digital music experience.
Playlist Management
Create playlists from your local files. Add, remove, and reorder tracks with drag-and-drop ease.
Cloud Music Playback
Play music stored in Google Drive, Dropbox, or OneDrive without downloading. Stream your entire cloud library.
FFmpeg Transcoding
Unsupported audio formats are automatically transcoded using built-in FFmpeg WebAssembly, so you can play virtually any audio file.
100% Private
Your music files stay on your device. No tracking, no data collection, no sign-up required.
Supported Audio Formats
From lossy to lossless, OnlinePlayer handles them all:
Lossy
MP3, AAC, OGG, WMA, M4A
Lossless
FLAC, WAV, ALAC, AIFF, APE
Other
OPUS, WebM Audio, AMR, AC3
How to Play Music Online
Open OnlinePlayer
Visit onlineplayer.app in any modern browser.
Add Your Music
Drag and drop audio files or select them from your device. Add your entire album at once.
Enjoy Your Music
Watch the vinyl spin as your music plays with full playback controls.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I play FLAC files in the browser?
Yes! OnlinePlayer supports FLAC and other lossless formats natively, preserving the full audio quality.
Are my music files uploaded?
No. All audio files are processed locally on your device. Nothing is uploaded to any server.
Can I stream music from cloud storage?
Yes, you can connect your Google Drive, Dropbox, or OneDrive account and stream music directly.
Does it support keyboard shortcuts?
Yes, OnlinePlayer supports keyboard shortcuts — Space to play/pause, arrow keys to seek, M to mute, and more.
Is there a file size limit?
No. Since files are processed locally, there are no file size restrictions.