TunesKit DRM Audible Converter
A smart DRM removal solution specially developed for Audible users to crack DRM protection from Audible audiobooks by converting the DRM AA, AAX audio books to DRM-free formats, including lossless audio, MP3, M4A, M4B, AAC, FLAC, WAV, etc.
Cost / License
- Paid
- Proprietary
Platforms
- Mac
- Windows
Features
Tags
- audible-drm-removal
- aax-converter
- aa-aax-to-mp3-converter
- audible-converter
- aa-converter
- no-itunes-required
TunesKit DRM Audible Converter News & Activities
Recent activities
- POX added TunesKit DRM Audible Converter as alternative to Libation, ViWizard Audio Converter, Epubor Audible Converter and TuneFab Audible Converter
TunesKit DRM Audible Converter information
What is TunesKit DRM Audible Converter?
TunesKit Audible Converter for Windows is a perfect DRM removal tool for Audible audiobooks to remove DRM from Audible audio books and convert AA, AAX to MP3, M4A, AAC, etc. with chapters preserved.
With the purpose of letting you get full control over the audiobooks you purchased from Audible.com, the specially designed TunesKit Audible Audiobook Converter for Windows is unveiled, with which you can easily and completely bypass DRM copyright encryption from Audible AA and AAX audiobooks so as to enjoy your Audible book collections on any popular MP3 player, such as iPod, PSP, Zune, Creative Zen, Sony Walkman, iRiver, etc as freely as you expect.
Apart from the lossless output format, TunesKit DRM Audible Audiobook Converter also provides a great number of other common output audio formats, including MP3, AC3, AAC, M4A, M4B, OGG, AIFF, APE, FLAC, WMA, WAV, M4R, MKA, AU, etc. Besides, you are allowed to customize the codec, audio channel, bit rate, sample rate for the audiobooks according to your own needs.





Comments and Reviews
What compelled me to buy this software is that this software allows me to remove the Audible DRM losslessly, without re-encoding it. Being an audio nerd and realizing that re-compressing audio a second time (especially for low bitrate audio) is a terrible idea, this software does this job very well and quickly (because it doesn't need to re-compress).
That being said, I didn't find out about OpenAudible (which is free) until after the fact. For a free solution, it works pretty nice. Though, to remove the DRM the Audible files (an MPEG-4 format) is converted to MP3, which unfortunately, will re-compress the already compressed audio file. If I would have known about OpenAudio beforehand, I probably could overlook this "feature", but now I am glad that I can do it losslessly.
Either way, I love now that I can play the audiobooks in my favorite podcast player, PocketCasts!