Quick Tip: Create Ringtones in iTunes for Free

Quick Tip: Create Ringtones in iTunes for Free

Tutorial Details
  • Topics: iTunes, Conversion
  • Difficulty: Beginner
  • Estimated Completion Time: 5 minutes

You have plenty of choices for how to make your iPhone unique: you can change the wallpaper to your family portrait, arrange the home screen by color of app icons, or perhaps add your own ringtones. Follow the instructions below and you’ll see how to create a ringtone from any song in your iTunes library, for free. But please, don’t set it to Gangnam Style.


Step 1: Select your song


Right click and select Get info

In iTunes, find the song you want to use for your fancy new ringtone. Right-click and select ‘Get Info’.


Step 2: Set a Start and Stop time


Navigate to Options

Once you’re in the info view, navigate along the top to Options and from there you must select both a start and a stop time. After some fiddling around with the track to find where exactly you want it to start, you can trim it down, and then click OK – remember it can’t be longer than 40 seconds.

Tip:You may need to check the Start and Stop time boxes first if they are unchecked.

Step 3: Creating an AAC Version


Convert to AAC Version

Next, right-click again on the track and click on Create AAC Version. This will automatically duplicate the track, and will create the file you will be working with from now on. You’ll notice a difference in the time of the track compared to the original. You’ll probably want to go back to the original file and remove the start and stop times of the song if you want it to return to normal.


Step 4: Converting to a Ringtone


Right-click and choose “Show in Finder”

You next need to locate to file of the track, and to do that you should right-click on the new version, and chose Show in Finder.


The new AAC Version and the original track

This should present you with the track name, with a .m4a extension. We need to rename that to .m4r which is as simple as removing the ‘a’ and replacing with an ‘r’. You’ll get a popup asking if you’re sure, click Use .m4r.


Click Use .m4r
Tip: Don’t close this Finder window, you’ll need it again in a few minutes.

Step 5: Deleting the AAC Version


Delete Song

Make sure to keep the file

Go back into iTunes once more, right-click and delete the AAC Version (the shorter duplicate of the original). Click Delete Song and Keep File on the popups.


Step 6: Adding to Tones

Finally, you should go back to Finder and double-click on your ringtone file (.m4r), which should automatically copy it to the Tones section of your iTunes library.


Your ringtone should now show up in the Tones section

Conclusion

So there we go, you can create ringtones from any of your iTunes music, all for free in just a few simple steps. Now you can annoy your friends with witty tones and enjoy your very personalized phone whenever someone calls.

Toby Seers is togsy on Themeforest
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  • Kevin Lorenz

    Nice article. Here my tipp for the by far best ringtone http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fusGbgED-gg ever ;)

  • immovableobject

    Or, you could just use the ringtone-making feature built right into Garage Band.

    You select the song from your iTunes library from within Garage Band. Previewing and adjusting start and stop times is much easier (you do it by moving sliders on the audio waveform). And when you are done, the ringtone is imported directly into iTunes. No error prone song duplication, deletion or mucking about with file extensions is required.

    The process has even been published up on this site:

    http://mac.tutsplus.com/tutorials/media/make-a-ringtone-with-garageband/

    • The Dude

      to complicated compared to this.

      • immovableobject

        To each his own, I guess. I actually ended up paying for RInger ($4.00 at the Mac App Store; 5 star reviews), The clip selection process is similar to using Garageband, but its a much lighter weight app, minus the overhead of all the superfluous music making features.

  • http://www.alokdesai.in/ Alok Desai

    wow thanku so much!! :) :)

  • Nickie

    When i click rename .m4r it doesn’t change the file type it goes like this .m4r.m4a ?Windows 7

  • alina

    I am only seeing Show in Internet Explorer and Show in Itunes, no “finder” -___-

  • David Xiong

    i can’t find the “Show in Folder” when i right click.

  • Guesty

    The instructions work great. Couple of things to note: First, the process is gonna be a little different on Windows. Second, when you get to step 3 — make sure you are making the modification in your main iTunes window. It isn’t going to work so great if you have the iPhone window version selected. For step 4, you choose Show In Internet Explorer; you then basically go through all of the steps and just remember that “Finder” and “Internet Explorer” are basically interchangeable terms. I don’t recall needing to delete anything (not saying that I didn’t mess something up, lol). After generating the .m4r file, SYNC your ringtones from your PC to your iPhone and you should be home free.