The Best Music Streaming Services to Get Your Groove On
Featured in this article
Music sure has come a long way since you had to go dig through the bins at your local record store. You can pipe hundreds of millions of songs directly into your headphones from anywhere with an internet connection, all for the price of one CD each month. No more buying tracks or buffing out scuffs.
All of these services’ libraries pretty much mirror each other, with the phrase “over 100 millions songs” being thrown around by multiple services. The things that separate streaming services are the quality of music discovery, the experience on desktop and mobile apps, what devices you can use them with, and of course their sound quality. Most of them have free tiers, but the experience improves if you subscribe and pay a monthly fee.
It was hard work, but I spent a few weeks jamming out to my favorite tracks, judging recommendations, and crunching the numbers on subscription plans to figure out which music streaming service deserves your dollars.
If you need to upgrade your listening device, we've got guides for the Best Wireless Headphones, Best Wirefree Earbuds, and Best Cheap Headphones.
Updated October 2025: We've updated this post with information about Spotify Lossless, added more information about lossless music, and updated plan and pricing information where applicable.
Listening Platform
While all the big players are available on most common operating systems, the level of feature support and polish isn't consistent. Apple Music, for example, is tied closely into the iOS digital ecosystem, making it easy to keep all of your accounts and info together, but Android users would need to jump through some hoops to manage their accounts. Amazon Music would prefer if you used Alexa speakers to listen, although support varies.
The top pick on this list, Spotify, does well to support most major mobile and desktop platforms, as well as a variety of game consoles, but the other services tend to vary in their compatibility. Make sure to check that your favorite devices are supported, particularly if you're listening on esoteric hardware like a Garmin Watch or Windows Phone.
You shouldn't be afraid to switch platforms if you find one isn't working out for you. Almost all of our picks offer a way to import your existing library and playlists from other services, making it easy to pick up where you left off without packing up any vinyl.
Audio Quality
Some streaming services offer lossless audio, which just means that the compression used to transmit the file doesn't reduce its quality. Lossy music quality is typically measured in kilobits per second, or Kbps, with most streaming audio falling between 256 Kbps and 320 Kbps. Lossless audio is usually discussed with two numbers, bit rate and sample rate, with the most common being CD quality at 16-bit and 44.1 KHz. If you're interested in learning more, we have a great explainer about Hi-Fi and lossless audio.
That sounds great on paper, but the reality is that most people probably won't notice the difference, particularly if you listen on earbuds or Bluetooth speakers. The A/V Experts at WIRED can't really tell unless they listen closely, and NPR has a quiz where you can test your ear to see if you can detect any compression.
You're more likely to hear the difference if you listen on high-end hardware, and it becomes more apparent in classical music and jazz, where pristine recording technology and light production touch can make certain high and low tones stand out more.
The downside is that these files are often four to five times the size of their compressed audio counterparts. That means they'll take up more storage space on your phone or device and use up more of your data when you download or stream them. There may be other hardware limitations, like needing Apple-specific audio chips for lossless audio on Apple Music, so make sure to check compatibility before you make this a key decision point.
You may also see the term “spatial audio,” which is a feature Apple Music added not long ago, and is also found on some Tidal tracks. Spatial audio uses Dolby Atmos technology to allow artists to mix music so that you hear the sound from around you and above for a much more immersive quality, but you'll need compatible headphones or speakers to hear the difference.
Friends-and-Family Plans
Almost all of the streaming services on this list offer some kind of discount for multiple users, usually in the form of a “family plan” even if there's no actual familial requirements. You can often save quite a bit of cash splitting up these monthly payments, and everyone gets their own account with their own playlists, music libraries, and recommendations. Just make sure you trust the people in your family plan to pay up on the first of the month.
Some services also offer discounts for students, which can save you some bucks if you're just trying to put on some tunes for studying or partying.
You may enjoy music more when you can share the experience with friends. If all those friends use Spotify, sharing the same platform will make it much easier. Tyler Hayes has tips for each service in How to Make Your Music Streaming More Social.
Honorable Mentions
Amazon Music: The best thing about Amazon Music is that you get a basic, ad-free version included with Prime, but there are a lot of catches, and the capabilities offered between the four available plans are so intricate they require a sizable chart to decipher. There are differences between which playlists you can access, whether you can shuffle or not, audio quality levels, and even supported devices. Overall, Amazon Music's clunky interface, so-so music discovery, and overly complicated subscription model hold it back from being a top pick.
Pandora: Once the king of music streaming, Pandora is still very popular, but it has steadily lost listeners over the past decade. The free tier is full of ads. There’s a visual ad in the app window, ads periodically interrupt your listening on the curated radio stations, you need to watch ads to skip tracks, and you need to watch ads to search for and play specific songs. Paying $5 a month gets rid of them, except you still have to watch ads to search for your own tracks. The $10-a-month Premium tier lets you search for songs without ads, but like the other tiers it promises unlimited skips but has fine print saying that “skips (are) limited by certain licensing restrictions.” The maximum bit rate of 192 Kbps is too low to be worth paying for. It’s a bad deal all around. Pandora is simply falling further and further behind.
Power up with unlimited access to WIRED. Get best-in-class reporting and exclusive subscriber content that's too important to ignore. Subscribe Today.










