Accurately convert
Japanese AIFC files to text
Sonix automatically transcribes your Japanese AIFC files to text in minutes. Access industry-leading artificial intelligence and the days of manually transcribing your Japanese AIFC files are long gone. Japanese speech to text: Sonix has been independently reviewed the most accurate Japanese automated transcription, translation, and subtitling platform.
Free to start — no credit card required.
Thousands of Sonix customers convert their Japanese AIFC files to text











Use Sonix to quickly convert
Japanese AIFC files to text
- 1Log into your Sonix account~30 sec
If you don't have one, you can sign up for Sonix's free account — Your free trial includes 30 minutes of transcription and translation.
- 2Upload your Japanese AIFC file~1 min
Click “Upload” and locate the Japanese AIFC file on your computer.
- 3Choose language: Japanese~10 sec
Select Japanese as the language spoken, then click “Transcribe”.
- 4Sonix transcribes your AIFC file~5 min
Sonix transcribes your Japanese AIFC file and converts it to Japanese text.
- 5Polish your Japanese transcript~2 min
Edit your Japanese transcript directly in the browser to correct any misheard words.
- 6Export Japanese text~10 sec
Export the Japanese text to MS Word, PDF, subtitles, or plain text.
Understanding Japanese AIFC files
Standard Japanese (hyojungo), based on Tokyo speech, dominates broadcasting and education and is the variety speech recognition models are primarily trained on. Kansai dialect (Osaka and Kyoto) is the most prominent regional variant, with different pitch accent and vocabulary, while Tohoku and Kyushu dialects diverge further from the standard; the traditional Ryukyuan languages of Okinawa differ so much that linguists classify them as separate languages rather than Japanese dialects.
AIFC technical specifications
- Codec
- Various (µ-law, A-law, G.722, IMA ADPCM; can also store PCM)
- Container
- AIFF-C (IFF-based)
- Typical bitrate
- Varies by codec; µ-law and A-law roughly halve uncompressed PCM size
- Sample rate
- Varies; commonly 44.1 kHz
- Compression
- Container (varies)
Japanese at a glance
- Speakers
- ~125 million speakers worldwide
- Writing system
- Mixed script: kanji (Chinese characters) combined with the hiragana and katakana syllabaries, written without spaces between words
- Say hello
- こんにちは (Kon'nichiwa)!
Frequently asked questions
How to improve the accuracy of your Japanese transcripts?
Start by improving the quality of the Japanese AIFC file that you upload to Sonix. Please use high quality recording equipment, recording in a quiet environment, and ensure that your speakers are speaking clearly to ensure that your transcript is as accurate as possible.
Any advice for the Japanese AIFC file that I upload?
Yes, please do not over-compress or over-filter the audio track of your Japanese AIFC file. By uploading a high quality version of your audio, we can give you the best level of accuracy.
Aside from AIFC, do you support other types of audio/video files?
Yes, we do! You can convert the following file types in Japanese with Sonix:
Why won't my AIFC file play on Windows?
Many Windows applications lack decoders for the compression codecs AIFC can contain, such as µ-law, A-law, and G.722. Converting the file to WAV or MP3, or uploading it to a service that decodes AIFC, works around this.
Do I need to convert AIFC to WAV before transcribing?
No. AIFC files can be uploaded directly and are decoded automatically before transcription, so a separate conversion step is not required.
Can Sonix transcribe Japanese audio and video to text?
Yes. Upload your audio or video file, select Japanese as the spoken language, and Sonix returns a transcript in standard Japanese script (kanji, hiragana, and katakana) that you can edit in the browser and export.
Does Japanese transcription handle Kansai dialect and regional accents?
Sonix's Japanese model is built around standard (Tokyo) Japanese and generally handles regional accents, but strongly dialectal vocabulary such as Kansai-ben expressions may need corrections in the built-in editor.
Can Sonix create Japanese subtitles?
Yes. After transcribing, you can split the Japanese transcript into subtitle lines and export SRT or VTT files for video captioning.
Trusted by professionals worldwide
I tried 4 other services, and Sonix is the easiest to use, most accurate, and more reasonably priced for the quality.
English dictation is very accurate. And the online editor is easy to use. Also it generates SRT files that I can import in my video editors for further processing.
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