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











Use Sonix to quickly convert
Korean AAC 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 Korean AAC file~1 min
Click “Upload” and locate the Korean AAC file on your computer.
- 3Choose language: Korean~10 sec
Select Korean as the language spoken, then click “Transcribe”.
- 4Sonix transcribes your AAC file~5 min
Sonix transcribes your Korean AAC file and converts it to Korean text.
- 5Polish your Korean transcript~2 min
Edit your Korean transcript directly in the browser to correct any misheard words.
- 6Export Korean text~10 sec
Export the Korean text to MS Word, PDF, subtitles, or plain text.
Understanding Korean AAC files
Standard South Korean, based on Seoul speech, dominates broadcast media and is what most speech recognition models are trained on. Regional dialects such as Gyeongsang, Jeolla, and Chungcheong differ in intonation and vocabulary, and Jeju speech is divergent enough that linguists often classify it as a separate language.
AAC technical specifications
- Codec
- AAC (Advanced Audio Coding), typically the AAC-LC or HE-AAC profile
- Container
- None — raw ADTS stream; AAC audio is also commonly carried inside MP4/M4A containers
- Typical bitrate
- 96–320 kbps (128–256 kbps common)
- Sample rate
- 8–96 kHz (44.1 or 48 kHz typical)
- Compression
- Lossy
Korean at a glance
- Speakers
- ~80 million speakers worldwide
- Writing system
- Hangul (Korean alphabet), written left to right
- Say hello
- 안녕하세요 (annyeonghaseyo)!
Frequently asked questions
How to improve the accuracy of your Korean transcripts?
Start by improving the quality of the Korean AAC 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 Korean AAC file that I upload?
Yes, please do not over-compress or over-filter the audio track of your Korean AAC file. By uploading a high quality version of your audio, we can give you the best level of accuracy.
Aside from AAC, do you support other types of audio/video files?
Yes, we do! You can convert the following file types in Korean with Sonix:
What is the difference between AAC and M4A files?
Both typically contain the same AAC-encoded audio; the difference is packaging. A .aac file is a raw ADTS stream, while a .m4a file wraps the audio in an MPEG-4 container that supports metadata such as tags, artwork, and chapters.
Why won't my AAC file open in some apps?
Raw .aac files are a bare audio stream without a standard container, so some players and editors that expect MP4/M4A files cannot read them. Renaming the extension does not fix this — remux or convert the file into an M4A or MP3 instead.
Can Sonix transcribe Korean audio and video files?
Yes. Upload your Korean recording and Sonix generates a transcript in Hangul that you can edit in the browser alongside the synced audio, then export to formats like DOCX, PDF, and SRT.
Does Korean transcription handle regional dialects like Gyeongsang or Jeolla?
Automated models are trained primarily on Seoul-standard Korean, so they generally handle regional accents but strong dialect speech may need more editing. You can review and correct those passages in the synced transcript editor.
Can I translate a Korean transcript into English?
Yes. After transcribing, you can translate the Korean transcript into English and other languages within Sonix, then export the translated documents or subtitles.
Trusted by professionals worldwide
I have a 30-40 minute commute to work and like to dictate memos and other brief documents along the way–but I haven't had an easy way to get them transcribed...until now. Thanks Sonix!
I loved my experience cause Sonix has a really good tutorial and it got the words from the audio pretty well. It really did it what I needed really fast, even if it was the first time using it.
More ways to convert & transcribe
Jump straight to a related format, language, or tool — every link below is a real page.