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

  1. 1Upload an audio file and wait for the waveform to appear.
  2. 2Drag across the waveform to mark each part you want removed.
  3. 3Use Play edited to hear the joined result, and Play original when you need to compare.
  4. 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.