Best free music streaming apps for Android in 2026

Free music streaming on Android still exists in 2026, but every “free” tier comes with a different set of restrictions — shuffle-only playback, skip limits, no background play, no offline downloads, three plays per licensed track per month, or just a lot of ads. Picking the right free music app depends on which restriction you can live with and which would push you to pay.

This guide ranks the best free music streaming apps for Android in 2026 — the legal ones, with the actual limits each tier imposes. We deliberately excluded modded APKs, cracked clients, and “premium unlocked” repacks — see the section at the end on why those are a bad trade even when they technically work.

For a paired-down decision tree, see our SoundCloud vs Spotify and SoundCloud vs YouTube Music head-to-heads, or our best Spotify alternatives guide for the wider paid-tier comparison.

Quick verdict table

AppFree tier on mobileCatalogueAdsSkip / play limitsBackground play
YouTube MusicFull on demandFull licensed + YouTube uploadsAudio adsUnlimited skipsYes (in Music app)
SpotifyFull catalogueFull licensedAudio adsShuffle on most playlists, six skips per hourYes
Amazon MusicMood radio / shuffle (Free tier); full library for PrimeFull licensedAudio adsLimited skips on Free, more on PrimeYes
SoundCloudIndie on demand, Go-only cappedCreator uploads + partial licensedAudio adsIndie unlimited; Go-only tracks three plays / monthYes
PandoraPersonalised radioLicensedAudio adsSix skips per hour per stationYes
AudiomackFull on demandHip-hop, R&B, electronic, Latin, African indieAudio adsUnlimitedYes
DeezerShuffle-only on mobileFull licensedAudio adsShuffle-only, limited skipsYes

Short answer:

What “free” actually means in 2026

Every free tier in this guide is supported by ads. That’s the deal — your time and attention pay for the music. What differs is which restrictions each app layers on top of the ads.

Read the table above as a layered constraint stack:

YouTube Music has the fewest layered constraints. Spotify has the strongest discovery on top of shuffle-restricted playback. SoundCloud and Audiomack give the most freedom on a niche catalogue.

Lossless audio is not available on any free tier in 2026. If you want bit-perfect playback on Android, our best lossless music streaming apps guide covers the paid options.

YouTube Music Free

YouTube Music on Aptoide · Android package: com.google.android.apps.youtube.music

YouTube Music’s free tier on Android is the most complete free music experience in mainstream streaming in 2026. You get the full licensed catalogue, plus the second layer of YouTube uploads (live concerts, covers, sped-up edits, fan uploads) that no other app exposes. There are no shuffle restrictions: you can pick a specific song from a specific album. Skips are unlimited. Background play works inside the YouTube Music app — lock your phone and music keeps playing.

The ad load is moderate — an audio ad roughly every 15 to 20 minutes during long listening sessions, shorter intervals when you start fresh. Algorithmic recommendations on the home page pull from both your music listening and your YouTube viewing history, which means surprisingly good cross-format picks.

What you give up vs Premium: no offline downloads, no audio-only mode when switching from a video (you can still play audio in background but the song doesn’t get cached for offline use), and the ads.

Best for: Anyone who wants the most usable mainstream free music app. The default recommendation in this guide.

Spotify Free

Android package: com.spotify.music

Spotify Free is the best discovery experience in free music streaming and the most frustrating playback experience.

The catalogue is the full Spotify library — same 100 million tracks Premium users get. Discover Weekly, Daily Mix, and Release Radar work on the free tier and remain best-in-category for personalised recommendations. The home screen, search, and library work normally.

The frustration is playback. On most mobile playlists and albums, Spotify Free is shuffle-only — you tap a playlist and Spotify decides the order. The exception is a small set of “Your Library” playlists you’ve made yourself and a few editorial Discover-Weekly-style mixes, which allow on-demand play. Skips are capped at six per hour per playlist. Audio ads run roughly every 15 to 20 minutes.

Background play works fine. There are no offline downloads on Free.

Best for: Listeners who care about discovery and curated playlists more than about picking specific tracks. If you mostly listen to “play something I’ll like” rather than “play this exact song,” Spotify Free works.

For the paid comparison, see our SoundCloud vs Spotify head-to-head.

Amazon Music Free

Amazon Music on Aptoide · Android package: com.amazon.mp3

Amazon Music’s free tier has two versions and the gap between them is huge.

Non-Prime free is shuffle-only on most catalogue, ad-supported, and largely a teaser for the Unlimited subscription. The free tier is genuinely restrictive — limited skips, no on-demand play of most tracks, ads between songs.

Prime free (included with an Amazon Prime subscription) unlocks a meaningful chunk of the Music Unlimited catalogue at standard quality with no extra cost. You get on-demand playback of millions of tracks (not the full 100M+ catalogue, but a curated subset), more skips, fewer ads, and offline downloads. It’s not as complete as Music Unlimited, but it’s a noticeably better free tier than Spotify Free if you happen to already have Prime.

If you cancel Prime, you drop back to the non-Prime free tier.

Best for: Prime subscribers who want a serviceable free music app and don’t want to pay anyone else. Free if you already have Prime; not worth signing up for Prime just to access it.

SoundCloud Free

SoundCloud on Aptoide · Android package: com.soundcloud.android

SoundCloud Free is two free tiers stitched together: unlimited on-demand for creator-uploaded tracks, and a strict cap for licensed “Go-only” tracks (three plays per track per month, then locked until you start a paid tier or wait for the monthly limit to reset).

In practice, the experience depends entirely on what you listen to:

Audio ads play between tracks. Skips are unlimited. Background play works. No offline downloads on Free.

Best for: Listeners who use SoundCloud for what it’s good at — indie discovery, DJ mixes, and producer culture — rather than as a Spotify substitute for chart music. For a 1:1 paid comparison, see our SoundCloud vs YouTube Music guide.

Pandora

Pandora on Aptoide · Android package: com.pandora.android

Pandora’s free tier is radio-style — you seed a station with an artist or song and Pandora plays similar music indefinitely. You can’t pick a specific track from the free tier; you can only seed and skip.

Skips are capped at six per hour per station, plus a few daily bonuses for watching ads. Audio ads run between tracks. The recommendation engine — Pandora’s original Music Genome Project — still works well for staying within a single genre or sound, and the station-tuning controls (thumbs up / down) shape playback over time.

Pandora’s free tier doesn’t compete with Spotify Free for catalogue depth, but it competes well for low-effort listening: pick a station, leave it playing, accept that you’ll hear ads and can’t repeat your favourite song on demand.

The service is US-only in 2026, which limits its relevance outside North America.

Best for: US listeners who want lean-back radio listening and don’t need to control individual tracks. Skip if you’re outside the US.

Audiomack

Audiomack on Aptoide · Android package: com.audiomack

Audiomack is the rare streaming service where the free tier is genuinely competitive with the paid one — and where the catalogue is strong enough to justify it.

The catalogue is deep in hip-hop, R&B, Afrobeats, Latin, dancehall, and electronic. African artists, in particular, often premiere on Audiomack before any other DSP. Mainstream major-label catalogue is patchy — you won’t find every Drake or Taylor Swift release — but for the genres Audiomack covers, the catalogue rivals SoundCloud and goes further than YouTube Music for unsigned regional music.

The free tier is unlimited on-demand, with audio ads between songs. Skips are unlimited. Background play works. The premium tier removes ads and unlocks higher-quality audio, but the free experience is unusually generous: no shuffle restriction, no skip limits, no monthly playback caps.

Best for: Hip-hop, R&B, Afrobeats, Latin, and electronic listeners. The most generous free tier in mainstream music streaming for the genres it covers.

Deezer Free

Deezer on Aptoide · Android package: deezer.android.app

Deezer Free on mobile is shuffle-only, like Spotify Free. You can’t pick a specific track from a playlist or album. Skips are limited, ads play between songs, and there are no offline downloads.

Deezer’s Flow radio is one of the better algorithmic features in the free tier — once you train it, it surfaces deep catalogue mixed with new releases. But for general on-demand listening, the shuffle restriction makes Spotify Free or YouTube Music Free a better choice in markets where all three are available.

Best for: Existing Deezer users who already use the service for paid listening on other devices and want a backup free option. Otherwise skip.

Why we excluded modded APKs and “premium unlocked” repacks

Cracked clients of Spotify, YouTube Music, Tidal, and Deezer circulate on third-party app stores and forums. We did not include them in this guide and we never will. Three reasons:

  1. Account bans. All major streaming services detect modified clients via TLS fingerprinting, modified-binary checksums, and behavioural signals. A ban can be permanent and applies to whatever email you signed up with. Losing a 10-year playlist library to save $11 / month is not a good trade.
  2. Malware risk. Modified APKs distributed outside official channels often pack adware, info stealers, or banking-trojan loaders. Even when a specific build is clean today, future updates of the same APK signature may not be. There is no review process holding the line.
  3. They keep your money in the wrong hands. Streaming services pay artists per stream. Cracked clients still report streams in some cases (so they can pretend to be real users), but in most cases they don’t — which means the artist you’re listening to gets paid nothing for your listening session. Free legal tiers like YouTube Music Free at least split ad revenue back to rights holders.

If price is the real issue, Audiomack, SoundCloud Free, and YouTube Music Free are legal options with no restrictions that meaningfully impact the listening experience for most listeners.

How to pick

FAQ

Which is the best free music app for Android in 2026?

YouTube Music Free is the most usable free music app on Android because it combines the full licensed catalogue with on-demand playback (no shuffle restriction), unlimited skips, and background play. Spotify Free has better discovery but most playback is shuffle-only on mobile.

Can I play music in the background on YouTube Music Free?

Yes — inside the YouTube Music app on Android, background playback works on the free tier. This is different from the main YouTube video app, where background play remains a Premium feature.

Is Spotify Free worth using?

For discovery and curated playlists, yes — Spotify’s recommendation engine is the strongest in the category and works on the free tier. For picking specific songs to play, no — most mobile playback on Spotify Free is shuffle-only with skip caps. If you only want to play exact tracks, YouTube Music Free or SoundCloud Free is a better free choice.

Can I download songs for offline listening on a free tier?

No, with one partial exception. Amazon Music’s Prime free tier (included with Amazon Prime) allows offline downloads of its curated catalogue. Every other free tier in this guide is online-only — Spotify Free, YouTube Music Free, SoundCloud Free, Pandora, Audiomack, and Deezer Free all require an internet connection.

Are modded or “premium unlocked” APKs safe?

No. Modified clients risk permanent account bans, often carry malware, and don’t pay artists in most cases. If price is the issue, Audiomack, SoundCloud, and YouTube Music all offer fully legal free tiers that work well for most listeners.

Can I get lossless audio for free?

No. Lossless and hi-res streaming are paid-tier features across every legitimate service in 2026. The cheapest entry to lossless is SoundCloud Go+ at around $10.99 / month for tracks with a lossless source, followed by Apple Music, Tidal, and Amazon Music Unlimited at around $11 / month each. See our best lossless music streaming apps for Android guide for the full comparison.

Which free tier has the fewest ads?

Audiomack and SoundCloud Free run audio ads between songs at a lower frequency than Spotify Free or YouTube Music Free. The exact ad load varies by region and listener, but in our day-to-day testing both feel less ad-heavy than the big-three services.