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How to play FLAC files on iPhone and iPad in iOS 11

You’ll soon be able to play FLAC files on your iPhone or iPad with iOS 11!

If you’re an audiophile who likes to keep your music in FLAC format, it appears you’ll be able to play those files on your iPhone or iPad when iOS 11 drops in the fall, thanks to the new Files app and a QuickTime-like player embedded within it.

Apple’s Files app is designed to host all your files from different services — like iCloud Drive and Dropbox — in one central location. In order to play your FLAC files, you’ll need to save them to one of those services, then open the audio clip in the Files app.

Apple occasionally offers updates to iOS, watchOS, tvOS, and macOS as closed developer previews or public betas for iPhone, iPad, and Mac. (Sadly, no public betas for the Apple Watch or tvOS.) While the betas contain new features, they also contain pre-release bugs that can prevent the normal use of your iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Apple TV, or Mac, and are not intended for everyday use on a primary device. That’s why we strongly recommend staying away from developer previews unless you need them for software development, and using the public betas with caution. If you depend on your devices, wait for the final release.

How to play FLAC files on iPhone and iPad in iOS 11

  1. AirDrop the FLAC file to any device running iOS 11.
  2. Tap Save to iCloud Drive.

    Note: Though the top entry in AirDrop’s menu, Open with… Files, looks tempting, it doesn’t actually let you play media files; you have to first save it to a service like iCloud Drive.

  3. Tap the FLAC file to open your track.

Your FLAC audio should begin playing automatically, and you’ll be able to access it from the Files app in the future.

To be fair, this isn’t true integration with iOS — it’s still a pretty roundabout way of playing FLAC files on your iPhone or iPad, and there’s no real way to create playlists or import them to the Music app. That said, iOS 11 is still in its earliest developer beta; anything’s possible by the time it hits a public release in the Fall.

What do you think?

Will Apple gear up for full FLAC support or is this just a small feature inside the new Files app? Let us know what you think (or what you hope) in the comments below!

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