Morse Code Translator
Convert English to Morse code and Morse code to English instantly
How to Use the Morse Code Translator
1Translate text to Morse code
Type or paste text in the top input box, or click the random button (š). The translator supports letters, numbers, and punctuation.
2Decode Morse code to text
Enter Morse code in the bottom box using dots (.) and dashes (-). Separate letters with spaces and words with forward slashes (/).
3Play audio for practice
Click the play button to hear the Morse code. Adjust playback speed, tone frequency, and WPM.
4Use the flashing light
Watch the light flash in sync with playback to learn the rhythm and timing of Morse signals.
5Download and export
Download your conversions as text files or export Morse code as audio files (WAV/MP3) for offline practice and sharing.
6Audio settings
Open the audio settings to customize tone frequency (200-1000 Hz), playback speed, and WPM.
Tips for better results:
- ā¢Use the random phrase button to create practice text
- ā¢Use the copy button for quick text sharing
- ā¢Toggle slash separators for different formatting styles
- ā¢Turn on loop playback for repeated listening practice
- ā¢Use the character count to track message length
- ā¢Check unsupported characters before sharing a result
- ā¢Try short phrases first when practicing audio or light signals
Quick start - Convert or decode Morse code in seconds
Use the translator for everyday Morse code tasks: convert English text, decode dots and dashes, play the signal, copy the result, or download it for practice and sharing.
Type Your Message
Enter English text or Morse code directly in the translator boxes.
Instant Translation
See each character convert instantly into dots (ā¢) and dashes (-).
Listen & Learn
Play the audio or use the flashing light view to learn Morse rhythm and timing.
More ways to work with Morse code
The homepage covers the most common text translation flow, while the related tools help with images, audio files, long text, visual signals, and learning workflows.
Image decoding
Upload an image that contains Morse patterns and use the Morse code image decoder
Audio decoding
Decode Morse code from recordings with the Morse code audio decoder
Long text and files
Work with longer content using the text-to-Morse file converter and Morse text decoder
Visual signal playback
Use the flashing light view to follow the rhythm of dots, dashes, and pauses.
Clear input handling
Unsupported characters are handled clearly so you can spot what needs to be changed.
Letters, numbers, and punctuation
Convert common text, numbers, and punctuation supported by International Morse code.
How the Morse code translator works
The translator maps supported characters to International Morse code, keeps letter and word spacing readable, and uses timing settings to generate audio and flashing signals.
Real-time character mapping
Each supported character is converted into its dot-and-dash sequence as you type.
Image pattern recognition
Our Morse image decoder helps detect Morse patterns in photos and convert them back to text.
Audio signal analysis
The Morse audio decoder uses frequency and timing analysis to read Morse-like tones from sound files.
Reference and learning pages
Our Morse code reference pages and learning guides cover the alphabet, numbers, abbreviations, practice topics, and history.
Learning resources for practice and real use
Use the reference pages and practice tools to learn the alphabet, understand timing, prepare for amateur radio, or keep Morse code examples for classroom and emergency communication training.
Learning modules:
- ā¢Morse alphabet reference with letters, numbers, punctuation, and timing notes
- ā¢Common words and phrases for repeatable practice
- ā¢Radio abbreviations and prosigns used in Morse communication
- ā¢Audio playback with adjustable speed, tone, and flashing light feedback
Useful scenarios:
- ā¢Amateur radio practice and CW basics
- ā¢SOS and emergency signal examples for learning and reference
- ā¢Telegraph history and how Morse signals were sent
- ā¢Classroom activities for pattern recognition, encoding, and decoding
Popular learning topics include "I love you" in Morse code, SOS, names, short secret messages, and simple phrases such as "hello world". These examples are useful for beginners, classrooms, gifts, puzzles, and radio practice.