Amazon Music Unlimited Apple Music Google Play Music Pandora Spotify TidalMonthly feePrime members: $7.99, £7.99, N/A; Non-Prime members: $9.99, £9.99, AU$11.99; Alexa-only service: Free $9.99, £9.99, AU$11.99 $9.99, £9.99, AU$11.99 Plus: $4.99; Premium: $9.99 $9.99, £9.99, AU$11.99, $12.99 with Hulu Premium: $9.99, £9.99, AU$14.99; HiFi: $19.99, £19.99, AU$23.99Free option?Yes, with ads No Yes Yes, with ads Yes, with ads NoFree trial period30 days 3 months 30 days 60 days 30 days 3 months
Music library size50 million 50 million Over 40 million Millions 50 million 50 millionMaximum bitrate256Kbps 256Kbps 320Kbps 192Kbps 320Kbps 1,411KbpsFamily sharing?Yes, $14.99, £14.99, AU$17.99 for up to 6 users Yes, $14.99, £14.99, AU$17.99 for up to 6 users Yes, $14.99, £14.99, AU$17.99 per month for up to 6 users Yes, $14.99 for up to 6 users Yes, $5, £5, AU$6 per month per additional user, up to 5 Yes, 50% off each additional account, up to 4Student discountNo Yes, Price varies by country No $4.99 (Premium) $4.99 (US only) Premium: $4.99, HiFi: $9.99 (US only)US military discountNo No No Yes No YesOffline listeningMobile and desktop Mobile only Mobile only Mobile only Mobile and desktop Mobile onlyRadio stationsYes Yes Yes Yes Yes NoPodcastsNo No Yes Yes Yes YesMusic videosNo Yes No No Yes YesMusic locker functionalityNo Yes Yes No No No
This guide covers on-demand music streaming services, and for that reason, we've purposefully left out services that only play music in a radio format. Until last year this list excluded Pandora, but now that the company also offers a Premium tier, it's included here. Slacker Radio, TuneIn and iHeartRadio, meanwhile, are services that play music stations based around a theme or artist, without you explicitly picking tracks.
Amazon was one of the first services to offer uploading your MP3 collection into the cloud, but this was officially discontinued in 2018. Meanwhile, the Apple and Google services listed above still allow you to combine your personal music collection with the streaming catalog, so if you've invested money in digital music over the years, that money isn't wasted. Those so-called "music lockers" are available independently of the subscription services below, but also work in concert with them for subscribers of both.
The number of songs offered by a music service used to be one of the main differentiators, but most now offer 30 million songs or more. However, depending on your favored genre, some of them have a more robust catalog that include many under-the-radar, indie or hip-hop artists. If you're musically inclined, constantly on the hunt for your favorite new band, a streaming service like Spotify or Tidal may be more up your alley. Users who are less ambitious about expanding their musical taste will be satisfied with the smaller catalogs Amazon Music Unlimited and Google Play Music offer. Apple Music is somewhere in the middle, offering a healthy mix of mainstream tunes and underground unknowns.