Remove Plosive Pops from Audio

"P" and "B" sounds blast a puff of air at the mic, creating a low-frequency "pop" or thump. This tool removes the plosive energy without a pop filter, after the fact.

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Drop an audio or video file here

or

MP3, WAV, M4A, FLAC, OGG, AAC

Cleaning your audio…

Before

Tip: press the space bar to toggle Before / After.


How it works

Plosives concentrate their energy in the low frequencies, below the voice's intelligible range. A targeted high-pass at ~100 Hz removes the pop's thump while leaving the consonant and the rest of the voice intact.

What it's good for

  • Voiceovers recorded without a pop shield
  • Close-mic podcasting
  • Home-studio vocals
  • Field interviews

Details

Engine
DSP
Formats
MP3, WAV, M4A, FLAC, OGG, AAC
Price
Free to try

Frequently asked questions

Pop filters reduce but rarely eliminate plosives, especially up close. This cleans up the pops that still made it onto the recording.

They share a high-pass mechanism but are tuned differently: de-plosive targets the brief pop bursts, rumble removal targets continuous sub-bass vibration. Use whichever matches your problem.

No — the intelligible part of those consonants is higher up; only the sub-bass air-blast is removed.

The high-pass sits around 100 Hz, but very deep voices can lose a little chest body; nudge the cutoff lower if the result feels thin.

Yes. Plosive pops are an airflow effect on P and B sounds, so it cleans them in any language.

No GPU is needed; it is a quick DSP filter and runs on the free tier within the demo length limits.

Yes. The same low-frequency removal works on plosives in singing exactly as it does in speech.

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