Music is one of the many joys in life.It brings people together, can make or break your mood, remind you of a specific memory or time in your life, and make us dance. So whether you require tunes to work and keep you focused or when you are out for a drive, clearing your head, there are numerous music streaming services available today.
While they are well worth paying for, there's also plenty of stuff you can access for free.
Most of the paid services also offer free trials. We've listed services here with completely free tiers, though you can upgrade to a higher level of service to remove ads, increase the size of the music library, allow more skips, or improve stream quality in bitrate.
Quality:Up to160kbps for mobile device users Files:MP3, M4P, MP4 Library size:82+ million Platforms:iOS and Android apps, desktop app, web player, smart TV apps, connected speaker support, and cars
Our pick for the best free music service is Spotify. Even though it has paid subscription options, the free version can be easily integrated into streaming devices such as Sonos, which uses its own native UX. But there's a lot of content here to enjoy and focused genres for rock, pop, indie, moods, new releases, throwbacks, and charts. The free tier is ad-supported, but I do not find it overly intrusive.
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Quality:N/A Files:N/A Library size:50+ million (2 million in the free library for Prime users) Platforms:iOS and Android apps, desktop app, web player, connected speaker support, cars
The free tier for Prime users features more than two million songs and more than 2,000 playlists and stations-with unlimited skips and available for offline playback. The full tier comes at an incremental cost to Prime Customers for an additional$7.99 a month. Non-Prime customers pay$9.99 a month. Amazon also provides a lossless quality streaming service, Amazon MusicHD, for$12.99 for Prime members.
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Quality:128kbps Files:AACLibrary Size:60+ million Platforms:iOS and Android apps
The search giant has a wide variety of music, with good mobile apps, but it's heavily ad-supported. It has excellent search features too, with lots of live music recordings. A stand-out feature of YouTube Musicis that you can search for songs by their lyrics.
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Quality:64kbps Files:N/A Library size:N/A Platforms:iOS and Android apps, Web UX, smart device integration
Pandorahas been owned by satellite radio provider SiriusXM since 2019. With Pandora, music is created "thematically." You chose a bunch of artists, and it figures out what tastes you have, and it gives you music based on that music style. Ads are frequent.
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Quality: 128kbps, 16-bit Files: MP3, FLAC Library size: 20 million Platforms:iOS and Android apps, smart device integration, Web UX
iHeartRadiois something of a hybrid between a streaming platform and a radio service, as it has over 20 million songs in its inventory that are classified and searchable by artists. It has over 1,500 browsable radio stations. Stations/Channels can be chosen based on the performing artist (i.e., The Rolling Stones). Music is determined based on that artist's music style -- not necessarily the artist itself, similar to Pandora.
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The best free music service is Spotifysince you can access all your playlists, discover new music, and share tunes with friends for free, as well as listen to a wide array of award-winning podcasts.
Free music service | Audio Quality | Library Size |
Spotify | Up to160kbps | 82+ million |
Amazon Music | N/A | 2 million |
YouTube Music | 128kbps | 60+ million |
Pandora | 64kbps | N/A |
iHeartRadio | 128kbps | 20 million |
Since price isn't a factor in this situation, the right music streaming service for you will come down to your own preferences. Each service has different interfaces and features, so compare these to what matters the most to you. You can try out each service (since they are all free) and make your decision from there.
Choose this free music service... | If you want... |
Spotify | The best overall option |
Amazon Music | A free music service along with Amazon Prime benefits |
YouTube Music | The ability to search for songs by their lyrics |
Pandora | Curated playlists based on your music taste |
iHeartRadio | To listen to live radio |
We chose these free music services by a mix of research and using the services ourselves. We compared factors like audio quality, reviews (both good and bad), different features, and each service's library size to make our final picks.
A streaming platform is a cloud-based service with a catalog of music typically sorted by genre or artist. These contain playlists of albums or other thematic ways of sorting (such as by decades, style, or mood) so that the music can be randomly accessed. They either have apps or websites and can be integrated with a smart speaker device (Amazon Echo, Google Home, Sonos), but some (such as YouTube or Deezer) require paying for the premium tiers.
The music streaming service with the most tracks is Apple Music with 90 million songs at the time of this writing. However, Apple Music does not have a free tier option, so you'll have to pay monthly to access its massive library.
Here are a few other options to look into: