Podcast Audio Enhancer — Make Voice Recordings Sound Broadcast-Clean
Enhance a podcast, interview, or talking-head voice track to a fuller, clearer, broadcast-ready sound — free, in your browser, with nothing uploaded.
Replaces tools like
Works well with
Eziclip's Podcast Audio Enhancer improves spoken-word recordings — interviews, podcasts, video voice — by removing background noise and room tone, then warming and lifting the voice with a Podcast preset and quiet-mic boost. It runs entirely in your browser: nothing is uploaded, there's no watermark and no sign-up, and you get a lossless WAV back.
Enhancing, not just de-noising, a podcast voice
Stripping the hiss out of a podcast gets you halfway. A clip with the noise gone can still sound thin, boxy, or distant — like someone talking across a desk. This tool treats noise removal as one step inside a fuller enhancement: clear the background, then actually shape the voice so it sounds like it belongs on a published episode.
The Podcast preset adds low-end warmth so a voice has chest and body, eases back the boxy 'recorded-in-a-room' midrange, lifts the presence band so words sit forward and intelligible, and adds a touch of air on top. A gentle compressor evens out the loud and quiet moments the way a host's voice should sit. The result is fuller and more present, not just quieter.
It's tuned for spoken word — one or two people talking. Drop in an interview, a solo monologue, a remote-guest track, or the voice from a talking-head video, and the chain assumes 'human voice that should sound good,' not 'generic audio.'
Maximum mode kills the room tone between words
The giveaway of a home-recorded podcast isn't loud noise — it's the quiet hum, hiss, and air conditioning that sits under every pause. The room never goes silent, so the gaps between sentences feel alive with low-level noise instead of clean.
Switch the strength to Maximum and the enhancer runs a second voice-isolation pass plus a voice-activity gate — it learns where the speech is and ducks everything that isn't voice. Pauses between words go genuinely quiet, the way an edited podcast should, while the talking stays natural. That clean silence is often what makes the difference between 'recorded at home' and 'sounds like a real show.'
Lighter strengths keep more of the natural room, in case Maximum feels too tight for a conversational, in-the-room vibe. You pick how aggressive the cleanup is.
Boost a quiet mic without amplifying the hiss
Plenty of podcast and interview audio comes in too quiet — a laptop mic, a phone in someone's hand, a guest who sat too far from their headset. Turn that up the naive way and you turn the hiss up with it.
Boost quiet audio lifts the level before the voice is enhanced, so the cleanup sees a healthy signal and removes the noise you just raised — instead of locking it in. A quiet, distant interview comes back at a usable, confident level with the floor still clean. A built-in peak limiter keeps the louder moments from clipping after the boost and the preset's make-up gain.
It's the fix for 'I can barely hear my guest' that doesn't trade quiet-but-clean for loud-but-noisy.
Built for episodes and clips that stay on your machine
This is aimed at short-form spoken word — interview segments, podcast clips, audiograms, and the voice track from short videos, up to about two minutes a pass. That covers the social cut-downs and the segments you most often need to rescue fast.
Everything happens on your device. The audio is decoded and processed in your browser with WebAssembly, so the recording — which may be an unreleased episode or a private interview — never leaves your computer. There's no upload, no queue, no account, and no watermark stamped on the output. You export a lossless WAV, so nothing is re-compressed on the way out and the enhanced track drops straight into your editor.
It's free because that's the choice here, not because your recording is the product. Nothing is uploaded, nothing is sold, nothing is held back behind a sign-up.
How to enhance podcasts
- 1
Drop in your podcast or interview audio
Add the voice recording — a podcast segment, interview, remote-guest track, or the audio from a talking-head video. It loads and processes in your browser; nothing is uploaded.
- 2
Pick Podcast and tune the strength
Choose the Podcast preset for warm, present spoken-word voice. Turn strength up toward Maximum to silence room tone between words, and switch on Boost quiet audio if the mic came in too low.
- 3
Preview, then download a clean WAV
A/B the enhanced voice against the original until it sounds right, then export a lossless WAV — no watermark, no sign-up — ready to drop into your edit.
Questions
Load the recording, pick the Podcast preset, and turn strength up toward Maximum. The preset warms and clarifies the voice while Maximum removes the room tone and hiss that sit under every pause — the two things that most make home recordings sound unpolished. If the mic was quiet, switch on Boost quiet audio too. It all runs in your browser for free, with nothing uploaded.
It does more than remove noise. After clearing the background it adds low-end warmth so the voice has body, eases back the boxy midrange, lifts the presence band so words stay clear and forward, and adds gentle air on top — with light compression to even out loud and quiet moments. The goal is a fuller, more present, broadcast-style voice, not just a quieter one.
Yes. Turn on Boost quiet audio to lift a distant or low guest before the cleanup runs, so the noise you raise gets removed rather than baked in. Use Maximum strength to isolate the voice and quiet the room behind it. A peak limiter keeps the louder parts from clipping after the boost.
Yes. The audio is decoded and enhanced entirely on your device using WebAssembly — it's never uploaded to a server, never queued, and never stored anywhere. An unreleased episode or a private interview stays on your computer the whole time. There's no account and no watermark on the output.
You get a lossless WAV, so the enhanced voice isn't re-compressed and drops straight into your editor. The tool is built for short-form spoken word — interview segments, podcast clips, and short-video voice up to about two minutes per pass — which covers most clips you need to fix quickly.