The best music streaming services in 2025

There’s no such thing as one “best” music streaming service. Most of these apps are designed around the same principles and provide access to a huge music catalog. Pretty much none of them are paying artists properly, yet nearly all of them are steadily raising prices. If you’ve used one to build up a library over the years, that one is most likely to be in tune with your musical tastes.

That said, if you’ve grown tired of whatever service you use today, we’ve spent months getting to know all of the major music streamers, feeding them similar data and taking note of how they adapt to our preferences over time. While the broad strokes are similar with each, there are a few key differences in the margins that might sway you from one app to another. Below, we’ve highlighted the best music streaming services on the whole and broken down where they excel and fall short.

Screenshots from the music streaming services Deezer, Amazon Music Unlimited and Pandora Premium.
Jeff Dunn for Engadget

Deezer has an attractive app, CD-quality streaming, a competitive library, a (limited) free tier and the option to upload local MP3 files. It also gives quick access to several live radio stations from around the globe, which is great. There’s little truly wrong with it, so if you dig its interface and find those features appealing, it should serve you well. But it costs a dollar more than Apple Music, YouTube Music and Tidal each month, and its playlists and discovery tools generally aren’t as expansive. It technically lacks the highest-res streams offered by Apple, Qobuz and Tidal as well.

Amazon Music Unlimited offers lossless streaming and podcasts, with many shows available ad-free. Naturally, it works great with Amazon’s fleet of Alexa devices. Its interface is somewhat clunkier than most of our main picks, though, with weaker discovery and curation features than Apple Music and an overly aggressive approach to promoting podcasts and audiobooks you may not care about. It also costs $1 more per month than Apple Music, YouTube Music and Tidal unless you have a Prime subscription.

Pandora is superb at surfacing music you’ll probably like, so its free or Plus tiers will work great if all you need is a simple, personalized internet radio. If you want music on-demand, though, you need a Premium subscription, which costs $11 a month. That service is much less feature-rich than our top picks, however, and it has the most compressed streaming quality of any option we’ve tested, topping out at 192kbps.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/music/best-music-streaming-service-130046189.html?src=rss