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How to make custom ringtones for an iPhone
It doesn’t take long to get tired of the handful of ringtones that come with your iPhone. If you’d rather hear a song when you have an incoming call, Apple would like you to pay a dollar or more per ringtone in the Tones store.
But save your money; you can create your own ringtones using music you already own in your iTunes library.
Admittedly, the process is a bit convoluted — Apple didn’t make it super easy to use your own tones — and you will need to use iTunes on your computer. But it’s free and lets you convert any part of any song you own into a ringtone.
How to create a ringtone for your iPhone using iTunes
The below steps are specifically illustrated for iTunes on a PC, but you’ll use essentially the same process on a Mac computer.
1. Start iTunes on your computer.
2. Find the song that you’d like to use and decide what 30-second snippet of the track you want to make your ringtone. It can be the first 30 seconds of the song, the last, or anywhere else within the track. Note the start and stop time — this will come in handy shortly.
3. Right-click the song and click Song Info, then click the “Options” tab at the top of the dialog box.
4. Change the “start” and “stop” times to the time you decided in Step 2 and then click “OK.”
5. Make sure the song is still selected, and then click the “File” menu. Then click “Convert,” and “Create AAC version.” You should see a second version of the track appear in iTunes — the original and a 30-second version (which, you can’t tell by looking at it, but happens to be in the AAC format rather than MP3).
6. Drag the 30-second-long version of the song to your computer’s desktop.
7. Since you no longer need the short version of the song in iTunes and it’ll just be in the way if you listen to music using the iTunes app, delete the short version from iTunes. Click it in iTunes and press Delete. You may need to confirm this by clicking “Delete Song” and “Move to Recycle Bin.”
8. Go back to the file you copied to the desktop and, if you can see the complete filename including the “.m4a” file extension, change the extension from “.m4a” to “.m4r” and click “Yes” if your computer asks you to confirm this change. If you can’t see the extension, you’ll need to change a setting in Windows first:
- Type “Control Panel” in the Start Menu search bar and click the Control Panel when you see it appear in the search results.
- Type “File Explorer” in the Control Panel’s search box and click “File Explorer Options.”
- Click the “View” tab and clear the checkbox for “Hide extensions for known file types.”
9. Click “OK.”
10. Now you can go back to the song on the desktop and change the file extension.
11. If you want to, return to the Control Panel’s File Explorer Options and re-select the option to hide extensions. This will return your computer to its original settings.
How to copy the ringtone to your iPhone
Now that you’ve created the ringtone, it’s time to copy it to your phone.
1. Connect your iPhone to your computer using a connection cable.
2. Start iTunes and click the phone icon that appears in the upper left, beside the drop-down menu. You should now see details about your iPhone in iTunes.
3. If it’s not already selected, click “Summary” in the left pane and then, in the Options section on the right, click to check the option to “Manually manage music and videos.” Click “Apply.”
4. On the left side of the screen, under On My Device, click “Tones.”
5. Drag your ringtone track from the desktop to the Tones folder. The song will automatically copy to your iPhone.
How to set the new ringtone on your iPhone
1. After all that work, it’s time to set the ringtone so you’ll hear it when your phone rings.
2. Start the Settings app on your iPhone.
3. Tap “Sounds” or “Sounds & Haptics” and then tap “Ringtone.”
4. You should see your new tone in the list; tap it.
You can also set up a custom ringtone for specific people in your contact list. To do that, open the Contacts app and choose a contact. Tap “Edit” and then tap “Ringtone.” Any choice you make here will be specific to this person and won’t affect your default ringtone.
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