Remove parts from audio
Mark sections to delete, preview the joined result, then export a clean file.
Preparing the audio engine...
How to use Remove parts from audio
Use this when one recording should stay one recording, but a few moments need to disappear. It is for deleting mistakes, pauses, false starts, private details, or noisy sections from the middle of a file.
What to click
- 1Upload an audio file and wait for the waveform to appear.
- 2Drag across the waveform to mark each part you want removed.
- 3Use Play edited to hear the joined result, and Play original when you need to compare.
- 4Adjust the range edges, audition the cut, choose the export format, then export the edited audio.
Best use cases
- Removing a cough, stumble, phone buzz, or false start from an otherwise useful take.
- Deleting dead air or long pauses while keeping the original order.
- Removing private names, numbers, side conversations, or mistakes before sharing a recording.
- Cleaning a lesson, interview, rehearsal note, meeting clip, or voice memo without opening a full editor.
Control guide
- Drag on the waveform
Marks the section that should disappear.
- Default: no removed ranges.
- Affects: the final exported file, not the original upload.
- Example: drag over a cough or long pause.
- Preview
Plays the edited version with all removed parts skipped.
- Use it before export to hear the joins.
- Affects: playback only.
- Play original
Plays the unedited source for comparison.
- Use it when you are unsure whether a moment should be cut.
- Affects: playback only.
- In / Out
Sets the exact start and end time for one removed part.
- Range: anywhere inside the uploaded file.
- Affects: the selected red removal range.
- Example: change 01:14.20 to 01:14.05 if the cut starts late.
- Audition button
Checks one cut by jumping from before it to after it.
- Affects: playback only.
- Best for: checking a single join without replaying the full file.
- Format
Chooses the exported file type.
- Default: MP3.
- Options: MP3, WAV stereo, WAV mono.
- Use WAV mono for smaller spoken-word exports.
When this is not the right tool: If you need several separate files from one long recording, use the main AudioMultiCut editor instead. This tool is best when the final answer is still one continuous file.