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AAC Won't Open? Convert to MKV Instantly

Fast, instant AAC to MKV conversion. No signup required. Just drop your .aac file and get .mkv in seconds.

256-bit TLS encryptionFiles deleted in 24hNo signup required

Generation loss — quality may degrade

AAC uses lossy compression, and so does MKV. Converting means decoding and re-encoding — each cycle can permanently degrade quality. Convert from the original source file whenever possible.

Some metadata may not survive

Your AAC file may contain MP4 atoms, iTunes tags metadata. MKV has limited or no support for these metadata types. Location data (GPS), camera settings, and color profiles may be stripped during conversion.

Default format on Apple devices (iTunes, Apple Music)

Your device saves files in AAC by default (Apple devices (iTunes, Apple Music)). Most people convert because the files won't open on other devices — MKV is universally supported and will work everywhere.

What compression artifacts to expect

MKV lossy compression can produce codec-dependent. At the high quality settings CocoConvert uses by default, these are usually invisible to the eye. Lower quality settings trade visual fidelity for smaller file sizes.

About AAC to MKV Conversion

Dealing with a AAC file that won't open on your device? You're not alone — AAC compatibility issues are one of the most common reasons people search for a file converter. AAC (Advanced Audio Coding) offers better quality than MP3 at the same bitrate — the default codec for Apple devices.

The fix is simple: convert your AAC to MKV. MKV (Matroska) is an open container supporting virtually any codec, multiple audio tracks, and subtitles. This conversion lets you improve file compatibility across devices, solving the problem in seconds rather than hours of troubleshooting.

Full Name: AAC uses Advanced Audio Coding, while MKV uses Matroska Video. Compression: AAC uses Lossy, while MKV uses Lossy. Color Depth: AAC uses —, while MKV uses 8–10 bits (codec dependent). AAC uses lossy compression, and so does MKV. Converting means decoding and re-encoding — each cycle can permanently degrade quality. Convert from the original source file whenever possible.

CocoConvert processes your AAC file on secure servers in Germany — upload, convert, download. Your files are encrypted via TLS and automatically deleted within 24 hours. No account needed, no software to install, and it works on any device with a browser.

This conversion is ideal when you Your AAC file won't open on a recipient's device or in an application, or when you A website, service, or platform only accepts MKV uploads. Common misconception: ""I'll convert to MKV and then back to AAC — it'll be the same"" — in reality, each lossy conversion cycle permanently degrades quality. going aac → mkv → aac will produce a noticeably worse file than the original. always keep your source file.

The conversion engine behind CocoConvert uses FFmpeg, Sharp, and qpdf — the same open-source libraries trusted by Netflix, YouTube, and enterprise platforms. Pro users can batch convert up to 100 files at once.

How to Convert AAC to MKV

  1. 1

    Add your AAC file

    Drag and drop your .aac file into the converter, or tap "Browse" to pick it from your device. Multiple files are supported for batch processing.

  2. 2

    Pick MKV output

    Select .mkv as the target format. CocoConvert automatically applies the best quality settings for this conversion.

  3. 3

    Start conversion

    Hit the Convert button. The audio engine processes your file server-side — no CPU drain on your device.

  4. 4

    Save your file

    Once done, download your .mkv file. For batch jobs, download all at once as a zip.

What Happens When You Convert AAC to MKV

Your AAC file is decoded and re-encoded as MKV.

1

Your AAC file is uploaded and the format is validated

2

The file content is decoded into its raw representation

3

The data is re-encoded in MKV format with optimal settings

4

The converted file is ready for download

AAC vs MKV — Detailed Comparison

Feature.AAC.MKV
Full NameAdvanced Audio CodingMatroska Video
CompressionLossyLossy
Color Depth8–10 bits (codec dependent)
HDR SupportYes
Typical File Size1 MB per minute at 128 kbps50–200 MB per minute
Platform SupportVery WideVery Wide
Browser SupportUniversalLimited
Year Created19972002
Open StandardYesYes

Should You Convert AAC to MKV?

When to Convert

  • You need just the audio track from a video recording
  • You're creating a podcast or audio file from video content
  • You captured this file on Apple devices (iTunes, Apple Music) and need to share it with others

When NOT to Convert

  • You're converting just because the file "seems old" — re-encoding lossy-to-lossy always degrades quality

Common Mistakes When Converting AAC to MKV

"I'll convert to MKV and then back to AAC — it'll be the same"

Each lossy conversion cycle permanently degrades quality. Going AAC → MKV → AAC will produce a noticeably worse file than the original. Always keep your source file.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why won't my AAC file open?

AAC files may not open if your device lacks the right codec or application. Converting to MKV — a more widely supported format — usually resolves this. MKV (Matroska) is an open container supporting virtually any codec, multiple audio tracks, and subtitles.

Is it safe to convert AAC to MKV online?

Yes. CocoConvert encrypts your file via TLS, processes it on isolated servers in Germany, and permanently deletes it within 24 hours. Your files are never shared or analysed.

Will I lose quality converting AAC to MKV?

AAC uses lossy compression, and so does MKV. Converting means decoding and re-encoding — each cycle can permanently degrade quality. Convert from the original source file whenever possible. CocoConvert uses high-quality encoder defaults to preserve as much fidelity as possible.

How large can my AAC file be?

Free users can convert files up to 250 MB each. Pro users get a 5 GB limit per file, and Business API users have custom limits.

Can I convert AAC to MKV on my phone?

Absolutely. CocoConvert works in any modern browser — iOS Safari, Android Chrome, and all desktop browsers. No app required.

Powered by — installed on our conversion workers
FFmpeg 8.1 (static)

Versions are pinned in our worker Dockerfile and re-built via CI on every change.