
SoundCloud is the same age as Spotify, hosts more creator-uploaded music than any other platform, and is still where producers, DJs, and remixers go first. It is also the streaming app most people open once a month, wonder why they are paying for, and then forget about until the next algorithmic playlist disappoints them. So is SoundCloud worth it in 2026? The honest answer depends on whether you listen, make, or play music for crowds, and the gap between those three answers is wider than it has ever been.
This guide skips the marketing copy and walks through who SoundCloud actually serves well in 2026, who should not pay for it, and where the free tier still earns its keep. For wider shortlists, see our best SoundCloud alternatives roundup, the SoundCloud vs Spotify 2026 head-to-head, and the best apps for discovering new music on Android list.
TL;DR — is SoundCloud worth it?
| You are a… | Verdict in 2026 | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Casual listener | Skip the paid tiers | Spotify or YouTube Music have deeper licensed catalogues for the same money |
| Indie music fan | Yes, free tier | Unsigned tracks and remixes that never reach licensed services |
| Producer or beat-maker | Yes, paid | Upload, stats, monetisation, and a direct fan path live here |
| DJ or mix listener | Yes, free or paid | Mixes and edits the majors will not license |
| Podcast listener | No | Podcasts moved off SoundCloud years ago |
The fast take: SoundCloud is worth it if your relationship with music is creator-first. It is not worth it if you mostly hit play on chart hits and curated playlists, where Spotify and YouTube Music both do more for the same monthly fee.
SoundCloud pricing in 2026
SoundCloud sells four products. Two are for listeners, two are for creators, and the value calculation is different for each.
Listener tiers
- Free — ad-supported, full discovery and search, but on-demand playback of tracks tagged “Go only” stops after the first three plays. Skips are capped.
- SoundCloud Go at $5.99 per month — ad-free listening, full on-demand catalogue, offline downloads on mobile. Audio quality stays at the standard rate of 128 kbps AAC.
- SoundCloud Go+ at $10.99 per month — everything in Go plus high-quality audio (up to 256 kbps AAC) and DJ-licensing for hardware DJ apps.
Creator tiers
- Next at $2.50 per month (billed annually) — unlimited upload time, basic stats, premier monetisation eligibility once you hit the listener thresholds.
- Next Pro at $8.25 per month (billed annually) — Next features plus advanced stats, listener heatmaps, scheduled releases, profile-on-track replacement, and instant access to monetisation.
Spotify Premium is $12.99 in the US in 2026. Apple Music is $11.99. SoundCloud Go+ at $10.99 is cheaper than both, and SoundCloud Go at $5.99 is the cheapest individual ad-free tier in mainstream streaming.
Who SoundCloud is worth it for in 2026
If you mostly listen to music
For a typical listener, SoundCloud is no longer the best paid streaming app in 2026. The reasons are straightforward: Spotify has 100 million licensed tracks and the strongest recommendation algorithm in the category, Apple Music has lossless audio included at $11.99, and YouTube Music bundles ad-free YouTube into a $14.99 Premium tier that doubles as a video subscription. SoundCloud’s licensed catalogue covers most chart music, but the deep cuts and back catalogues from major labels are not always there.
Where SoundCloud still wins for listeners is anything outside the major-label pipeline. Bootlegs, edits, remixes, and unsigned independent tracks live on SoundCloud and almost nowhere else. The free tier covers most of this without paying anything. The right pattern for most listeners is to keep SoundCloud as a free secondary app, use Spotify or YouTube Music as the daily driver, and only consider Go+ if the unsigned catalogue is more than 30% of your listening.
If you make music
This is the use case SoundCloud was built for, and 2026 has not changed it. SoundCloud is still the cheapest serious distribution platform for an independent producer. Uploads are direct, unlimited on the paid creator tiers, and your audience can comment on a specific moment in the track — a feedback channel no other major streaming app offers. Stats are good enough to know which countries to plan a show in. Monetisation through SoundCloud Premier and Repost runs at fan-supported subscription rates, which beats licensed-streaming royalties for an artist with under 100,000 monthly listeners.
The Next Pro tier at $8.25 per month is the right price for any producer planning to release more than three tracks a year. Below that volume, the free creator account is fine. Producers should also keep a Bandcamp page open as a parallel direct-sales channel — see the best apps for music collection and cataloguing on Android for how serious listeners actually track their libraries.
If you DJ or listen to mixes
SoundCloud is still where mixes live in 2026. Boiler Room sets, Cercle uploads, club residencies, and the long-tail of bedroom DJs all post on SoundCloud first. Mixcloud is the only real competitor for licensed long-form mixes, but the volume of free mixes on SoundCloud is much higher. Takedowns happen, but the free tier already gives you access to most of the mix catalogue without paying. The DJ-licensing perk in Go+ matters only if you mix from a hardware controller using a DJ app that SoundCloud has licensed. For phone listening, the free tier is enough.
Catalogue and discovery in 2026
SoundCloud’s catalogue is two things at once: a licensed library that overlaps roughly 80% with Spotify on major releases, and a creator-uploaded library of around 320 million tracks that no other major streaming service carries. For chart music, Spotify is more complete. For indie music, mashups, edits, and DJ mixes, SoundCloud is the only place most of it exists.
Discovery is the harder story. SoundCloud has invested in “First Fans” playlists and a Discover Weekly equivalent, but the algorithmic recommendation engine is still a generation behind Spotify’s Daily Mixes and Release Radar. Where SoundCloud beats Spotify on discovery is in two specific patterns: the comment thread on a track, which surfaces remixes and similar producers fast, and the “Related Tracks” sidebar, which is closer to a manual genre map than an algorithmic guess. Casual listeners will find this fiddly. Producers and DJs find it more useful than any algorithm because it surfaces unsigned music with no licensing filter in the way.
Audio quality in 2026
SoundCloud Go+ streams at 256 kbps AAC, which is comparable to Spotify Premium’s 320 kbps Ogg Vorbis in practical listening tests. Free listeners get 128 kbps AAC, which is fine on phone speakers and lossy through cheaper earbuds. SoundCloud still has no lossless tier in 2026, which puts it behind Apple Music, Tidal, and Amazon Music Unlimited for hi-fi listeners. For a wider hi-fi shortlist, see our best lossless music streaming apps for Android guide.
A specific quirk worth knowing: SoundCloud serves whatever bitrate the uploader provided. A producer who uploaded a 192 kbps MP3 will sound like a 192 kbps MP3 no matter what tier you pay for. This is unusual in streaming and worth keeping in mind when judging audio quality on a specific track.
Where SoundCloud falls short in 2026
- Algorithmic discovery for licensed music. Spotify Daily Mixes and Apple Music’s stations are simply better at this. SoundCloud’s algorithm leans on tags and follows more than listening behaviour, which means new listeners take longer to get good recommendations.
- No lossless audio. A standard expectation in 2026 streaming subscriptions that SoundCloud has not met. Tidal HiFi and Apple Music both include lossless at a similar price.
- Podcasts. Most podcasts left SoundCloud for Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or independent hosts years ago. If podcasts matter, SoundCloud is not the right app.
- Android Auto and Wear OS depth. SoundCloud supports both, but Spotify Connect, casting, and the watch experience remain a step ahead.
- Takedowns on the mix catalogue. Mixes can disappear when a label flags an unlicensed track. Saved sets sometimes lose tracks mid-mix. Mixcloud is more stable for long-form licensed mixes specifically.
Final verdict
SoundCloud Go+ at $10.99 is worth it in 2026 if at least one of the following is true: you spend serious listening time on unsigned music or mixes, you upload music or mixes yourself, or you DJ from a hardware controller that needs SoundCloud’s licensing. If none of those apply, the free tier is the right call — keep it installed as a secondary app, use it for the indie and remix catalogue, and pay for Spotify or Apple Music for the licensed library. SoundCloud Next Pro at $8.25 is the strongest pure value in the SoundCloud lineup if you make music at all, and beats every other independent-artist distribution platform on price.
FAQ
Is SoundCloud still relevant anymore?
Yes, but its relevance has narrowed. SoundCloud is still the default upload platform for independent producers and DJs, and its creator-uploaded catalogue remains the largest in streaming. For mainstream chart listening, it is no longer the most relevant app — Spotify and YouTube Music have taken that role. SoundCloud’s relevance in 2026 is concentrated around unsigned music, mixes, and creator-fan interaction.
Is SoundCloud Go worth it at $5.99?
Only if the ad-free experience matters more to you than catalogue depth. Go gives you ad-free playback on the standard catalogue at 128 kbps. If you want high-quality audio, you need Go+ at $10.99. Most listeners are better off either staying on the free tier or paying once for Go+, not stepping through Go.
Is SoundCloud better than Spotify?
For licensed music and algorithmic discovery, Spotify is better. For unsigned music, mixes, edits, and creator interaction, SoundCloud is better. The two apps solve different problems and many serious music fans keep both installed.
Why do people still use SoundCloud in 2026?
Three reasons cover most of it: producers upload there first, mixes only exist there, and the free tier is the cheapest legal way to hear unsigned music. None of those have been replaced by a newer service in any serious way.
Does SoundCloud pay artists better than Spotify?
For independent artists with under 100,000 monthly listeners, SoundCloud’s fan-powered royalty model and Premier programme generally pay better per stream than Spotify’s licensed pool. Above that listener threshold, Spotify usually pays more in absolute terms. The crossover point depends heavily on how concentrated a listener base is.
Can I listen to SoundCloud offline for free?
No. Offline downloads require SoundCloud Go or Go+. The free tier needs an active internet connection.