DJ Mix Splitter
Auto-detect track boundaries in a long DJ mix or live recording. Each track becomes its own file.
Drop your audio file here
or click to browse a file
The recording is scanned for silence at the threshold and gap length you set.
About this DJ mix splitter
Drop in a long mix and the tool finds the quiet moments — the moments where the DJ has dropped one track and is bringing in the next — and splits the recording at those boundaries. Each non-silent chunk becomes its own track.
Works on continuous DJ mixes, live recordings, radio shows and any long-form audio with discernible gaps between tracks.
How to split a DJ mix
- 01
Drop in the mix
MP3, WAV, FLAC, OGG, M4A — long files of any duration.
- 02
Tune the detection
Threshold = how quiet a gap has to be. Min gap = how long the gap needs to last.
- 03
Download the tracks
Each detected segment is rendered in the same format as the input.
Why use this mix splitter
- Auto-detects track boundaries via silence detection
- Adjustable threshold and minimum-gap controls
- Each segment exports in the same format as the input
- Free, private, no install
- No watermark, no signup
- Useful for DJ mixes, live recordings, radio shows, podcast multi-segment episodes
DJ mix splitter FAQ
What if the mix has no real gaps (continuous beatmatched mix)?
This tool relies on quiet moments to find boundaries. Continuously-beatmatched mixes (no breakdowns, no fades) won't split cleanly here — you'd need a manual cuesheet or AI-based track-boundary detection.
What's a typical threshold?
-30 dB works well for most studio mixes. Live recordings with crowd noise need -20 to -25 dB. If the splitter over-cuts, raise the threshold; if it misses gaps, lower it.
What's a minimum gap?
1-2 seconds for music tracks separated by short pauses. 3-5 seconds for radio shows or podcasts with longer breaks.
Is the audio re-encoded?
Yes — splits cross frame boundaries so we re-encode each segment. Output uses the same format as the input.
More dj & mix tools
Mashups, BPM, multi-track sets