Image Morse Code Translator

Morse Code Sound Translator

Decode a sound file of Morse code into readable text — or turn your text into sound. This Morse code sound translator reads the beeps by their timing, entirely on your device.

No upload — runs on your device Free · no sign-up Adjustable + manual fix
Drop a picture of Morse code, or click to choose
PNG · JPG · WebP · GIF — or paste a screenshot
Read on your device — never uploaded
No picture handy? Decode an example:
This Morse code sound translator takes any clip of Morse beeps and converts the sound into text. It analyses the loudness of the recording over time, detects each burst of tone, and measures its length to decide between a dot and a dash — then reads the silences to break the stream into letters and words. You get the decoded Morse and its plain-text meaning side by side.Sound is a natural way to send Morse, but decoding it by ear is slow and error-prone. Letting a Morse code sound translator do the timing means you can read a fast clip, a noisy field recording, or a synthetic beep track without counting anything yourself. A confidence estimate tells you how clean the reading was, and if a stray click throws it off you can nudge the threshold or edit the dots and dashes by hand.You can also go the other way: type a message and the tool plays it back as sound at your chosen speed, which is perfect for recording your own clips or practising copy. Prefer working from an image instead of sound? The image Morse code translator reads a photo of dots and dashes, and the text translator handles typing both directions.

Frequently asked questions

What is a Morse code sound translator?

It is a tool that listens to a sound clip of Morse beeps and converts it to text by measuring the length of each tone and gap. This one runs in the browser, so the sound file is never uploaded.

Can it play my text as sound too?

Yes. Type a message and press play to hear it as Morse tones at a speed you set in words per minute — useful for making practice clips.

Will it work on a noisy recording?

Often, yes. Raise or lower the detection threshold to separate the tones from background noise, and edit the detected Morse if a few elements are misread.

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