Audiomack: Music Downloader

Audiomack built its lane by handing listeners what other services wouldn’t: free downloads, a hip-hop and Afrobeats catalogue closer to mixtape culture, and a discovery feed that surfaces unsigned acts. The trade-off shows up around ad density on the free tier, audio quality capped at 192 kbps unless you pay, and gaps when a major label pulls a catalogue. These Audiomack alternatives cover the same listening modes, free streaming, downloads for offline play, and direct artist support, with different catalogue strengths and price models.

We picked seven, mixing the dominant subscription streamer, an indie-leaning community service, a paid-purchase artist marketplace, a HiFi-focused pick, and the YouTube-backed catalogue that overlaps heavily with Audiomack’s user-uploaded content.

Quick comparison

AppBest forFree planStarts atStandout
SpotifyDeepest catalogue and discoveryAds, shuffle on mobile$11.99/moPersonalised mixes, social listening
SoundCloudUGC, DJ sets, remixesAds, 30-min on-demand limit$4.99/mo GoDirect artist uploads
YouTube MusicFan-uploaded remixes alongside licensed catalogueAds, no background play$10.99/moMusic video integration
BandcampBuying tracks direct from artistsFree streaming, pay to downloadPer-album priceFair revenue split for artists
DeezerLossless audio on a sensible tierAds, shuffle on mobile$11.99/moFLAC included in standard premium
TIDALHi-Res audio for the same money as standard streamingLimited free tier$10.99/mo HiFiMaster-quality streaming
Apple MusicTight iOS integration and a curated catalogueNo free tier, trial only$10.99/moLossless and spatial audio included

Why people leave Audiomack

Ads sit in the middle of free listening. Skippable and unskippable audio ads land between songs and sometimes mid-track on the free tier. The cadence is higher than Spotify or YouTube Music free, and the ads play even when the screen is off.

Audio quality is capped at 192 kbps on free. Premium unlocks higher bitrate, but a free listener never gets above 192 kbps even on Wi-Fi. For lossless or 320 kbps, every other major service either matches or beats this for the same monthly fee.

Catalogue gaps appear without warning. Songs and full mixtapes occasionally vanish when an artist’s label pulls distribution, particularly for releases moved off the platform after a label signing. Playlists break and there’s no migration path.

Premium pricing rose to $4.99/month. That price is still under most rivals, but the bump erased part of the cheap-tier pitch. For a few dollars more, listeners get bigger catalogues and lossless audio on Deezer, TIDAL, or Apple Music.

The hip-hop, R&B, and Afrobeats focus is a feature for some, a limit for others. If your library leans into rock, classical, country, or electronic, Audiomack’s discovery feeds and front-page editorial keep pushing you back toward genres you don’t play.

The best Audiomack alternatives on Android

1. Spotify, best mainstream catalogue with the strongest discovery

Spotify runs the deepest licensed catalogue in the business, north of 100 million tracks and over 6 million podcasts. The recommendation engine pulls aggressively from listening history through Discover Weekly, Daily Mix, Release Radar, and the algorithmic radio feature that builds on any artist or track. For users hunting unknown acts, that surface area outdoes Audiomack’s editorial-driven discovery.

Where it falls short: the free mobile tier limits on-demand playback to shuffle on most playlists. Lossless audio remains gated behind specific premium configurations, and royalty rates remain a known sore point for artists.

Pricing: free with ads and shuffle limits. Premium Individual at $11.99/month. Family at $19.99/month for up to six accounts. Student at $5.99/month.

Switching from Audiomack: the catalogue overlap is significant for major-label hip-hop and Afrobeats. Independent and mixtape-only releases will not transfer. Liked songs and playlists can be moved using third-party tools like Soundiiz.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: the right pick when the priority is catalogue breadth and recommendations that actually surface new music.

2. SoundCloud, best for indie uploads and DJ-driven discovery

SoundCloud sits closest to Audiomack in spirit. Direct artist uploads, mixtape culture, and a free tier that lets fans share new sounds before labels touch them. The catalogue covers everything from bedroom producers to major-label rollouts that go SoundCloud-first.

Where it falls short: the free tier caps on-demand listening to 30 minutes per month after the first three plays of a track, with ads between tracks. Track removals due to copyright claims happen regularly and break playlists without warning.

Pricing: free with ads and on-demand limits. SoundCloud Go at $4.99/month (ad-free listening). Go+ at $10.99/month (full catalogue, offline downloads, higher bitrate).

Switching from Audiomack: the workflow is familiar, browse, follow, repost. Likes carry weight as discovery signal. Downloads on Go+ are tied to the app, not portable MP3 files.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: keep this one if your habit is following producers and DJs rather than albums and chart hits.

3. YouTube Music, best for fan-uploaded mixes alongside a deep licensed catalogue

YouTube Music carries the licensed catalogue most of its rivals carry, plus the long tail of fan-uploaded remixes, slowed-and-reverbs, and unofficial DJ sets that live on YouTube proper. That UGC overlap is the closest match to what makes Audiomack interesting, and YouTube Premium turns it into a unified subscription that also kills ads on the video site.

Where it falls short: background play and offline downloads require Premium. The free Music app limits background playback on mobile. Music videos sometimes serve longer ads than standard YouTube despite being labelled music.

Pricing: free with ads. YouTube Music Premium at $10.99/month. YouTube Premium at $13.99/month (Music plus ad-free YouTube). Family plans available.

Switching from Audiomack: the discovery surface is much wider but less hip-hop-curated. Use the home feed and station builds to retrain it toward your tastes. Liked songs from Audiomack can be re-favourited manually or through Soundiiz.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: the pick when remixes, edits, and music-video deep cuts are half the reason you open Audiomack.

4. Bandcamp, best for paying artists directly

Bandcamp is the artist-direct buying platform that pays creators a healthier cut, around 80 to 85 percent after fees, than streaming royalties. Streaming is free with no time limits in the app. Buying a track or album means owning the MP3, FLAC, or other format files, no DRM and no expiry.

Where it falls short: no algorithmic discovery. The store is browsable but the engine is editorial and tag-based, not personalised. Streaming counts on each track are limited before the platform nudges you toward buying.

Pricing: free streaming. Each release is set by the artist, sometimes pay-what-you-want, often $5 to $15 per album. No subscription tier.

Switching from Audiomack: Bandcamp is a complement, not a replacement. Use it when you want to actually pay an artist whose work you discovered on Audiomack. Downloads are real files you can move to any player.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: install this alongside whatever streamer you use. It pays the artists Audiomack helped you discover.

5. Deezer, best lossless tier without a premium markup

Deezer ships lossless FLAC audio on its standard Premium tier at a price that matches Spotify and Apple Music for compressed audio. The HiFi pitch is built in rather than charged extra, and the catalogue covers about 120 million tracks. Flow, the always-on personal radio, works without much retraining.

Where it falls short: the discovery engine is less aggressive than Spotify’s. Editorial coverage in non-French-speaking markets is thinner. Some podcasts and shows licensed in Europe are not in the US catalogue.

Pricing: free with ads and shuffle. Premium at $11.99/month with lossless FLAC. Family at $17.99/month.

Switching from Audiomack: playlist import via Soundiiz or TuneMyMusic. Liked tracks should transfer cleanly if they exist on major labels.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: worth the look if lossless audio matters and you don’t want to pay extra for it.

6. TIDAL, best Hi-Res audio for the same money as standard streaming

TIDAL restructured pricing so HiFi (lossless and Hi-Res) lands at $10.99/month, the same range as standard streaming on rivals. Catalogue covers around 110 million tracks, with stronger editorial presence in hip-hop, R&B, jazz, and electronic than most peers. Live session videos and behind-the-scenes recordings sit in the same app.

Where it falls short: the discovery engine still trails Spotify. Catalogue updates for very fresh underground hip-hop sometimes lag behind Audiomack and SoundCloud by days.

Pricing: limited free tier. HiFi at $10.99/month (lossless plus Hi-Res). Family at $16.99/month.

Switching from Audiomack: playlist transfer via Soundiiz works. The editorial leans toward similar genres, so the home feed retrains quickly.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: pick TIDAL when the catalogue lean is similar to Audiomack’s but audio fidelity matters more.

7. Apple Music, best for lossless and spatial audio in a single subscription

Apple Music bundles lossless audio, Hi-Res lossless, and Dolby Atmos spatial audio into its standard subscription with no upcharge. The catalogue sits at around 100 million tracks. Editorial playlists, especially in hip-hop and R&B, are strong and updated by humans rather than algorithms.

Where it falls short: Android playback isn’t as polished as the iOS app. Some interface choices feel like ports rather than native designs. No free tier beyond the trial.

Pricing: Individual at $10.99/month. Family at $16.99/month for up to six accounts. Student at $5.99/month. One-month free trial.

Switching from Audiomack: the catalogue overlap is high for major-label hip-hop. Library transfer is manageable with Soundiiz or Apple’s own importer for select services.

Download: Google Play

Bottom line: worth it for listeners locked into Apple devices or anyone who wants spatial audio without paying a higher tier.

How to choose

Pick Spotify if you want the largest catalogue and the strongest algorithmic discovery. The recommendation engine remains the gold standard for finding new artists outside Audiomack’s hip-hop and Afrobeats lanes.

Pick SoundCloud Go+ if you live on producer uploads, DJ sets, and remixes. The platform’s mood matches Audiomack closest, and the price is similar to Audiomack Premium.

Pick Deezer or TIDAL if lossless audio is the deciding factor. Both deliver FLAC on a standard tier instead of a separate HiFi upcharge.

Pick Bandcamp as a buying companion, not a replacement. Stream and download what you actually want to own, and pay the artist directly.

Pick YouTube Music if the fan uploads and unofficial remixes are half the appeal of Audiomack.

Stay on Audiomack if your daily mix is freshly dropped hip-hop, mixtapes, and Afrobeats that almost no other service indexes first. Audiomack’s $4.99/month Premium remains one of the cheapest unlimited downloads on Android.

FAQ

Is there a free version of Audiomack?

Yes. The free tier supports unlimited streaming and offline downloads with audio ads between tracks and bitrate capped at 192 kbps. Audiomack Premium at $4.99/month removes ads and unlocks higher-quality playback.

What is the cheapest Audiomack alternative?

SoundCloud Go at $4.99/month matches Audiomack Premium on price for ad-free listening. Free options include Spotify, Deezer, YouTube Music, SoundCloud, and Bandcamp, each with their own catalogue and ad restrictions.

Can I import my Audiomack playlists to Spotify or another service?

There is no built-in importer between Audiomack and the major streamers. Third-party tools like Soundiiz or TuneMyMusic can move playlists when both sides have the tracks licensed. Mixtape-only releases on Audiomack often do not exist on the destination service.

Which Audiomack alternative has the best free download feature?

Bandcamp lets you legally own the tracks you buy as DRM-free MP3 or FLAC files, which transfers anywhere. Among streaming services, SoundCloud Go+ and YouTube Music Premium offer offline playback inside their apps, but no portable file ownership.

Is Audiomack legal?

Yes. Audiomack licences music from artists, labels, and distributors. Some content is exclusive to the platform, particularly mixtapes and unsigned-artist releases. Tracks occasionally get pulled when artists or labels move distribution rights.

What do hip-hop fans use instead of Audiomack?

The most common stack is SoundCloud for early uploads, Spotify or TIDAL for major-label releases, and Bandcamp for buying directly from independent artists. Apple Music’s hip-hop editorial is also strong for curated playlists.