June 24, 2026
Clideo vs Headliner vs MyTools: Posting an MP3 to Facebook
Facebook won't take a raw MP3. Here's an honest comparison of three ways to post audio as a video — Clideo, Headliner, and MyTools — and which fits you.
You've got an MP3 — a new single, a fresh podcast episode, a recorded announcement — and you want it on your Facebook Page. So you open the upload box, drag the file in, and Facebook refuses it. It only takes video. The fix is always the same: pair the audio with something on screen and turn it into a video first. The question is which tool does that with the least friction. This is an honest comparison of three popular ways to post an MP3 to Facebook — Clideo, Headliner, and MyTools — including where each one quietly slows you down.
What Posting Audio to Facebook Actually Takes
Facebook has never accepted standalone audio. To share a song, an episode, or a voice recording, it has to become a video — which, at minimum, means a still image (your cover art or logo) held over the audio for its full length, exported as an MP4.
That sounds simple, but the everyday version has three snags:
- You don't want to learn video software for a job this small. You have the audio and an image; you just need them welded together.
- The export then has to get onto the Page. Most converters hand you an MP4 to download — and then you still have to open Facebook, find the right Page, and upload it by hand.
- "Free" tools often aren't, exactly. A watermark across the corner, a file-size wall, or a forced signup tends to appear right when you're ready to publish.
People reach for an online tool because the alternative — installing an editor on a work laptop for one post — is absurd. But the online options differ a lot in how far they carry you toward an actual, published Facebook post.
Clideo: The Plain Converter
Clideo is part of a suite of single-purpose online media tools, and its "MP3 to Video" page does exactly what it says: it puts a still image over your audio and exports an MP4. It's the most literal answer to "I need to turn this into a video."
What it gets right
- Dead-simple flow — upload the MP3, add an image or solid colour, export. No editor to navigate.
- A generous 500 MB upload ceiling on the free tier, comfortably more than most podcast episodes.
- Works on any device and any browser, with social-media aspect-ratio presets including a Facebook-friendly square.
Where it falls short
- A Clideo watermark sits in the bottom-right corner of every free export. Removing it means the Pro plan at around $9 per month.
- It stops at a download. Clideo doesn't post to Facebook — you get an MP4 and do the upload yourself, which is the step you were trying to avoid.
- Server-side processing. Your audio is uploaded to Clideo's infrastructure to be converted, rather than handled on your own device.
Headliner: The Podcaster's Studio
Headliner is built for exactly this audience — podcasters and audio creators who promote episodes on social. It goes well beyond a still image: animated waveforms, auto-generated captions, templates, and a social scheduler that can publish to Facebook and other platforms directly.
What it gets right
- Animated audiograms — moving waveforms and burned-in captions that make audio genuinely watchable in a scrolling feed, not just a static frame.
- Direct publishing and scheduling to Facebook Pages and other networks, so you can stay in one tool from edit to post.
- Auto-transcription and a deep template library that keep a series looking consistent episode to episode.
Where it falls short
- The free plan is capped. You get only a handful of watermark-free videos per month; beyond that, exports carry a Headliner watermark until you upgrade. Paid tiers run roughly $9.99/mo (Basic) to $19.99/mo (Pro) and up.
- It's a lot of tool for a small job. If all you want is cover art over a track, the templates, transcription, and timeline are overhead you have to click past.
- An account is required. You sign up for Headliner before you can export or publish anything.
MyTools: Straight to the Page
MyTools takes the narrowest possible aim: turn your MP3 into a simple cover-art video and post it to your Facebook Page, free. It doesn't try to be an editor. The conversion runs in your browser, and the tool connects to Facebook to publish on your behalf.
What it gets right
- It actually posts for you. Connect a Facebook Page once, add a title and caption, and the tool publishes the finished video straight to the Page — no download-and-re-upload round trip.
- Free with no watermark, ever, and no MyTools account. You only connect Facebook; there's no signup on our side and nothing stamped on your video.
- Cover art is handled. It pulls the artwork embedded in your MP3's tags automatically, or you can drop in your own JPG, PNG, or WebP, and pick square, landscape, or portrait to fit the feed.
- In-browser conversion. Your MP3 isn't uploaded to us for processing — it becomes a video on your device, and only the finished video is sent to Facebook when you publish.
Where it falls short
- A still image only. There are no animated waveforms, no burned-in captions, and no templates — if you want a moving audiogram, Headliner does that and MyTools doesn't.
- Facebook Pages only. It publishes to Pages you manage, not to personal profiles, and not to Instagram, YouTube, or anywhere else.
- One file at a time, up to 100 MB. There's no batch queue, and very long recordings can be slow to convert in the browser or bump into Facebook's own limits.
At a Glance
| Clideo | Headliner | MyTools | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free tier | Yes, with watermark | A few videos/month | Yes, no watermark |
| Posts to Facebook | No — download only | Yes | Yes (Pages) |
| Account required | Optional | Yes | No (just Facebook) |
| Animated waveform | No | Yes | No |
| File handling | Server upload | Server upload | In your browser |
| Best for | A quick one-off MP4 | A polished podcast feed | Posting fast to a Page |
Which One Should You Pick?
If you want your audio to move in the feed — waveforms bouncing, captions scrolling, a branded template across a whole series — Headliner is the right tool and worth its subscription for someone publishing every week. That polish is real, and MyTools doesn't pretend to match it.
If you just need a one-off MP4 file and don't mind doing the Facebook upload yourself, Clideo's converter is fine, as long as you can live with the corner watermark or pay to drop it.
But if your goal is the simplest path from "I have an MP3" to "it's live on my Page" — free, no watermark, no signup, no manual re-upload — MyTools is built for precisely that one job. You trade away animation and multi-platform reach for a tool that finishes the task instead of handing you a file at the halfway point.
The Bottom Line
All three turn audio into a video Facebook will accept; they differ in how far they take you and what they charge along the way. Clideo gives you a file, Headliner gives you a studio, and MyTools gives you a published post. If that last one is what you're after, post your MP3 to Facebook for free →.