---
title: "How to Make Quiet Audio Louder Without Blowing Out the Peaks | AudioMultiCut"
description: "A practical workflow for raising quiet recordings while avoiding clipping, pumping, and harsh compression."
canonical: "https://audiomulticut.com/articles/how-to-make-quiet-audio-louder"
---
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Raise the useful parts, protect the loud parts

# How to Make Quiet Audio Louder Without Blowing Out the Peaks

A practical workflow for raising quiet recordings while avoiding clipping, pumping, and harsh compression.

[Make Audio Louder](https://audiomulticut.com/tools/audio-volume-normalizer)[See How It Works](https://audiomulticut.com/how-it-works)

Start with gain

Normalize peaks

Use compression gently

![Audio Volume Normalizer controls for gain, quiet boost, and compression.](https://audiomulticut.com/_next/image?url=%2Farticle-screenshots%2Ftools-audio-volume-normalizer.jpg&w=1600&q=75&dpl=dpl_2JMPia5CMxdedvqoVqs9b5z7XM4q)

Quiet audio is usually easy to improve, but easy to overdo. If you only push gain, the loudest peaks can distort before the useful parts are comfortable.

A better workflow is to raise the level, keep a peak target, then use a small amount of compression or quiet lift only when the recording still feels uneven.

## Start with a peak target

Turn on peak normalization and set a target around -1 dB. That leaves a little headroom and prevents the export from hitting full scale.

Then raise gain slowly while listening to the loudest part of the recording. If a shout, clap, or mic bump starts to feel harsh, stop pushing gain and use compression instead.

## Bring up soft speech carefully

Quiet lift is useful when low-level speech disappears but the peaks are already high enough. Use it gently, because it can also raise room tone, fan noise, and background movement.

For lessons and meetings, a small improvement is usually better than a dramatic one. People would rather hear a natural recording with a little noise than a crushed file with every breath pulled forward.

## Export and test it

After the preview sounds right, export a copy and play it on normal speakers or headphones. If it still feels too quiet, adjust in small steps rather than jumping to extreme settings.

The final file should sound easier, not louder at all costs. That distinction matters alot when the recording is speech.

## More loudness guides

[Make quiet or uneven clips easier to hear

### Best Use Cases for an Online Audio Volume Normalizer

When to normalize audio, raise quiet recordings, add light compression, and export a more consistent file without turning the process into mastering.](https://audiomulticut.com/articles/audio-volume-normalizer-use-cases)[Louder is not always more even

### Audio Normalizer vs Compressor: What Is the Difference?

A plain-English comparison of gain, peak normalization, quiet lift, and compression for making everyday recordings easier to hear.](https://audiomulticut.com/articles/audio-normalizer-vs-compressor)[Use the right tool at the right stage

### How to Combine AudioMultiCut Tools Without Making the Edit Messy

A practical workflow for using the cutter, remove-parts editors, normalizer, audiogram maker, video tools, and spectrogram editor together without losing track of the job.](https://audiomulticut.com/articles/combine-audio-tools-workflow)

## Related pages and tools

[Audio Volume Normalizer→](https://audiomulticut.com/tools/audio-volume-normalizer)[Normalizer vs Compressor→](https://audiomulticut.com/articles/audio-normalizer-vs-compressor)

## Make a quiet recording easier to hear

Preview loudness changes locally in the browser and export a cleaner listening copy.

[Make Audio Louder](https://audiomulticut.com/tools/audio-volume-normalizer)

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