Morse Code Audio Generator
Convert text or pasted Morse into playable audio. Adjust speed, Farnsworth spacing, tone, pitch, and volume, then export WAV from your browser or use the audio tools below for MP3, decoding, books, video, and listening practice.
Est. time: 7s
3 spaces = letters · 7 = words · / = word break
Output (Morse)
Result... --- ... .... . .-.. .--.
Audio controls
Softens clicks at the start.
Softens clicks at the end.
Extra silence to avoid clipped tails.
How this Morse code audio generator works
This is the MorseWords audio hub. Type text or paste Morse, listen to the signal, tune the timing and tone, then export a WAV file or move to the right audio, MP3, decoder, book, video, or listening-practice tool.
Playback and WAV export happen locally in your browser; your message is not uploaded.
Who this page is for
Use it when you want to hear a complete Morse message or save a WAV file for practice, lessons, demos, timing checks, videos, or sharing.
What it accepts
The tool accepts plain text or pasted Morse. Spaces in pasted Morse control the letter and word gaps used for playback.
What it exports
WAV export is rendered locally, so the saved file preserves the same speed, Farnsworth spacing, pitch, volume, and tone you preview.
How to generate Morse audio
- Choose text input or Morse input.
- Enter the message and verify the generated Morse preview.
- Set speed, Farnsworth spacing, pitch, waveform, and volume.
- Play the audio, then export WAV when the timing sounds right.
Worked audio examples
Message audio
HELLO WORLD
Use this for a complete phrase you want to hear. Preview the timing, then export the same signal when it sounds right.
Practice call
CQ CQ
Use a short repeated call to check speed and spacing before saving a longer listening clip.
Short alert
SOS
SOS is compact and recognizable, so it is useful for testing tone, volume, and WAV export.
For more context on the short emergency pattern, see SOS in Morse code.
When to use each Morse audio tool
Morse code sound generator
Use it when you mainly want to shape the beep, tone preset, waveform, WAV, or MP3 sound for a short practice signal.
Morse code MP3 generator
Use it when the final deliverable should be a compact MP3 instead of the larger WAV file exported on this page.
Morse code audio decoder
Use it when you have a local audio file and need Morse audio to text. Clear tones and simple backgrounds decode best.
Book to Morse code translator
Use it for long text, TXT, EPUB, PDF, chapters, or book-length audio and video workflows.
Morse code video generator
Use it for short visual Morse clips with optional audio when you need video output instead of only sound.
Morse audio practice
Use practice and the audio quiz when the goal is listening recall, not just exporting a finished sound file. Also see audio quiz.
Morse code timing
Use the timing and Farnsworth guides when WPM, character speed, or learner spacing feels confusing. Also see Farnsworth timing.
Audio settings explained
Character speed
Sets the dit length. Raise it when symbols should form faster, and lower it when the characters are hard to separate.
Farnsworth spacing
Adds silence between letters and words while keeping each character crisp for listening practice.
Pitch, waveform, and volume
Change how the signal feels to your ear. These controls affect tone quality, not the Morse message.
Attack, release, and tail padding
Soften clicks and leave enough room so the final symbol is not clipped in the exported WAV.
For deeper timing rules, use the Morse code timing guide and the Farnsworth timing guide.
Common audio mistakes and fixes
- Audio sounds cramped: increase Farnsworth spacing before lowering character speed.
- Pitch feels uncomfortable: change pitch in small steps; this does not change the message.
- Symbols click: add a little attack and release, or use a smoother waveform.
- Export clips the ending: increase tail padding so the final release has room to finish.
MP3 vs WAV for Morse audio
Use WAV when you want clean timing, short dits, and editable audio. WAV files are larger because they are not compressed. Use the Morse code MP3 generator when you need a smaller downloadable file for sharing or embedding. For longer source text, use the book to Morse code translator for chapter-length audio or video exports, and the Morse code video generator.
Practical audio expectations
- This page creates Morse audio from typed text or pasted dots and dashes; use the decoder page for audio-to-text.
- Long documents belong in the book translator, which is designed for larger source files and longer exports.
- Pitch and tone controls change listening comfort, not the Morse characters or the decoded text.
- Playback and WAV export run locally in the browser; no remote URL import or server upload is required here.
Best next step after creating audio
If the file is for listening drills, move into Morse audio practice or test recognition with the Morse audio quiz.
Choose the right Morse audio tool
Start here for playable text-to-Morse audio, then move to the specific audio, export, decoding, book, video, or listening-practice tool that matches the job.
Create Morse sound
Shape a beep, tone, or radio-style signal when tone character matters more than a full message workflow.
Open Create Morse soundDownload MP3
Use the MP3 generator when you need a smaller shareable file instead of the WAV export on this page.
Open Download MP3Decode audio
Use the audio decoder when you have a local Morse audio file and want to turn the tones back into readable text.
Open Decode audioConvert long text or books
Move TXT, EPUB, PDF, or chapter-length source material into the book translator for longer audio or video output.
Open Convert long text or booksMake a Morse video
Create a downloadable visual Morse clip with an optional audio track for short messages and demos.
Open Make a Morse videoPractice listening
Build ear training with focused copy practice after you understand the speed and spacing you want.
Open Practice listeningTake an audio quiz
Check recognition with short listening prompts and immediate review when you are ready for a test.
Open Take an audio quizAudio FAQ
Can I translate text into Morse code audio?>
Yes. Type a message in text mode and the page converts it to Morse code, plays it as audio, and shows the Morse output beside the input.
Can I change the Morse speed?>
Yes. Character speed controls how fast each dit and dah is sent, while Farnsworth spacing can add extra room between letters and words for easier listening.
What is Farnsworth timing?>
Farnsworth timing keeps the characters crisp but stretches the gaps between characters and words. It is useful when you can hear individual letters but need more time to copy words.
Can I change the tone or pitch?>
Yes. The tone preset, pitch, volume, attack, and release controls change how the audio sounds. They do not change the Morse letters, word gaps, or decoded message.
Can I download the audio from this page?>
Yes. This page exports a WAV file rendered in your browser, so the saved file matches the timing and tone settings you preview.
When should I use the MP3 generator instead?>
Use the Morse code MP3 generator when you need a smaller downloadable MP3 for sharing, embedding, or sending. Use this page when you want quick playback or a clean WAV export.
Can I convert a whole book into Morse audio?>
Use the book to Morse code translator for long text, TXT, EPUB, or PDF input. The audio page is best for shorter messages you want to preview and tune quickly.
Can I decode Morse audio back into text?>
Use the Morse code audio decoder for that job. This page creates and plays Morse audio; the decoder page analyzes a local audio file and turns recognizable Morse tones into text.
Can I make a Morse code video?>
Yes, use the Morse code video generator when you need visual dots and dashes with an optional audio track. This page focuses on playable audio and WAV export.
Which audio format should I use, MP3 or WAV?>
WAV is larger but keeps short Morse tones clean for editing and timing checks. MP3 is smaller and easier to share, but it is compressed.
Is my text or audio uploaded to a server?>
No. Playback and WAV export happen locally in your browser. Your message is not uploaded to MorseWords servers or stored in a database. The audio source may be saved only in this browser on this device and can be cleared from site settings.

