Why people leave Amazon Music
- Recommendations are forgettable. The algorithm often loops the same big-label tracks. Discovery rarely surprises.
- The Prime tier is shuffle-only on most playlists and limits skips. Real on-demand control requires Amazon Music Unlimited at $12.99/month standalone.
- The interface is busy. Navigation buries music under banners for podcasts, Audible promos, and Amazon shopping links.
- App stability on Android. Players drop tracks, downloads stutter, and the cast-to-Echo flow breaks more often than competitors.
If those issues compound, here are seven Amazon Music alternatives worth installing.
Which app should you choose?
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Spotify if discovery and personalisation matter most. Discover Weekly is still the gold standard.
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Apple Music if you want lossless and Spatial Audio at the base price. No upcharge for HiFi.
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YouTube Music if the catalogue depth matters, including live versions, remixes, and uploads no other service licences.
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Tidal if lossless audio is a hard requirement and you want the cheapest legitimate path to Hi-Res FLAC.
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Deezer if you want the largest licensed catalogue with HiFi included on Premium and a clean Flow radio feature.
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SoundCloud if independent and underground music is what you actually listen to.
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Pandora if you mostly want personalised radio in the US and want to spend the least.
Stay on Amazon Music if you already pay for Prime and only want music as a side benefit. The bundled Prime tier is the cheapest way to get ad-free streaming if you would have paid for Prime anyway.
1. Spotify — best discovery and personalisation
Spotify’s recommendation engine is the deepest reason to switch. Discover Weekly, Daily Mix, and Release Radar regularly surface artists from outside the top 1,000, which is rare on Amazon Music. The algorithm pulls from billions of listening signals across 600+ million users.
Premium covers the same 100 million-track catalogue, plus 80 million podcasts and bundled audiobook hours. Spotify Connect handoff between phone, desktop, smart speakers, and TVs is more reliable than Amazon’s cast flow.
Audio quality tops at 320 kbps Ogg Vorbis. Lossless has been promised but is not shipping yet on standard Premium plans.
Advantages:
- Best-in-class recommendation engine
- Strongest podcast catalogue
- Spotify Connect handoff across devices
- 184-country availability
Disadvantages:
- No lossless tier yet
- Premium price climbed to $12.99/month
- Free tier has ads and skip limits
Pricing: Free with ads. Premium Individual $12.99/month, Family $21.99/month, Student $5.99/month, Duo $17.99/month.
2. Apple Music — best for lossless at base price
Apple Music includes lossless ALAC audio at every paid tier, going up to 24-bit/192 kHz Hi-Res Lossless on supported hardware. Spatial Audio with Dolby Atmos is mixed by Apple across the catalogue. Amazon Music charges $11.99 for Unlimited’s HD/Ultra HD tier, Apple charges $10.99 for everything.
The catalogue is 100 million songs. Beats 1 radio, curated playlists, and the Discovery Station algorithm provide credible alternatives to Amazon’s discovery interface. Apple’s recommendation engine has caught up over the past two years.
There is no ad-supported free tier. The Android app is functional but trails the iOS experience.
Advantages:
- Hi-Res Lossless and Spatial Audio at base price
- Cheaper than Amazon Music Unlimited
- Tight integration with iPhone, Mac, Apple Watch
- 100 million track catalogue
Disadvantages:
- No free tier
- Android app polish trails iOS
- No social or sharing features
Pricing: Individual $10.99/month, Family $16.99/month, Student $5.99/month.
3. YouTube Music — best catalogue depth
YouTube Music is the only major service that includes live performances, fan covers, remixes, and bootlegs alongside its licensed catalogue. For listeners who chase deep cuts and unofficial uploads, no licensed service comes close.
Premium streams audio-only at up to 256 kbps AAC, plus the full YouTube video catalogue ad-free. The AI radio feature builds playlists from text prompts, which is genuinely new ground. Bundling with YouTube Premium is the value play.
Audio quality is the limit. There is no lossless tier and no plan to add one.
Advantages:
- Largest practical catalogue including UGC
- Live performances and rarities
- AI radio from text prompts
- Bundled with YouTube Premium
Disadvantages:
- No lossless audio
- Free tier requires screen on for video
- Premium price climbed to $11.99/month
Pricing: Free with ads. Premium $11.99/month, Family $18.99/month, Student $5.49/month.
4. Tidal — best for lossless on a budget
Tidal restructured pricing in 2024 and now offers HiFi at $10.99/month with Hi-Res FLAC included. That undercuts Amazon Music Unlimited’s $12.99/month while delivering audibly better quality on most albums. The catalogue covers 110 million tracks.
Editorial curation skews heavier toward hip-hop, R&B, and jazz than Spotify or Amazon, with strong artist-direct content from former owner-operators. The recommendation engine is decent but trails Spotify on pop and rock discovery.
The user base is smaller than Spotify, which means social features and shared playlists are quieter. For solo listeners, that is a feature.
Advantages:
- Hi-Res FLAC included at $10.99/month
- Strong hip-hop, R&B, jazz curation
- Highest payout rate to artists per stream
- Cleaner interface than Amazon Music
Disadvantages:
- Smaller user base means fewer shared playlists
- Editorial coverage is genre-skewed
- Discovery weaker than Spotify
Pricing: HiFi $10.99/month individual, Family $16.99/month, Student $4.99/month.
5. Deezer — largest licensed catalogue
Deezer carries 120 million licensed tracks, the largest catalogue of any traditional streaming service. HiFi audio is included on Premium at no upcharge, and the Flow radio feature is one of the smarter lean-back options on the market.
For Amazon Music listeners frustrated by missing albums or regional licensing gaps, Deezer often fills the holes. European and Latin American catalogues are especially strong. SongCatcher song-identification is built into the search bar.
The discovery engine is good but not Spotify-grade. Editorial playlists are well done.
Advantages:
- 120 million track catalogue
- HiFi audio included on Premium
- Flow radio is unusually good
- Strong European and Latin coverage
Disadvantages:
- US discovery weaker than Spotify or Apple Music
- Free tier requires shuffle on mobile
- Some Premium features delayed in the US
Pricing: Free with ads. Premium $11.99/month, Family $19.99/month, Student $5.99/month.
6. SoundCloud — best for indie and underground music
SoundCloud hosts more than 400 million tracks, but the distinction is that a huge portion comes directly from independent artists, producers, and DJs. DJ mixes, free downloads from artists, unreleased demos, and early-career acts live on SoundCloud in ways they do not on Amazon Music.
The free tier allows on-demand listening with ads. Go and Go+ add ad-free playback, offline saves, and broader catalogue access at $4.99/month and $10.99/month respectively. For listeners who chase new artists before they sign to majors, no licensed service competes.
Audio quality peaks at 256 kbps AAC. No lossless tier exists.
Advantages:
- Massive independent and underground catalogue
- DJ mixes and unofficial remixes
- Cheapest paid tier on this list at $4.99/month
- Strong artist payouts via Fan-Powered Royalties
Disadvantages:
- No lossless tier
- Catalogue overlap with majors is partial
- Recommendations skew to genre echo chambers
Pricing: Free with ads. Go $4.99/month, Go+ $10.99/month.
7. Pandora — cheapest US ad-free streaming
Pandora Plus at $4.99/month is the cheapest legal ad-free music streaming subscription in the US. The personalised station algorithm has been refined over 20 years and remains one of the most effective lean-back radio experiences.
For ex-Amazon Music users who valued the ambient listening more than on-demand control, Pandora delivers exactly that for half the price of Amazon Music Unlimited. Premium tier at $10.99/month adds full on-demand playback if it is needed later.
The catch is geography. Pandora is US-only and shows no roadmap to change. The catalogue trails Amazon, Apple, and Spotify on new releases.
Advantages:
- Cheapest ad-free music subscription in the US at $4.99/month
- Best lean-back radio algorithm
- Modes feature lets you tune station behaviour
- Strong podcast catalogue
Disadvantages:
- US-only
- Plus tier still does not allow on-demand
- New release catalogue trails competitors
Pricing: Free with ads. Plus $4.99/month, Premium $10.99/month.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Lossless | Free tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spotify | Discovery and personalisation | No | Yes |
| Apple Music | Lossless at base price | Yes | No |
| YouTube Music | Catalogue depth | No | Yes |
| Tidal | Hi-Res FLAC budget | Yes | No |
| Deezer | Largest licensed library | Yes | Yes |
| SoundCloud | Indie and underground | No | Yes |
| Pandora | Cheapest US ad-free | No | Yes |
FAQ
Is Apple Music better than Amazon Music?
For most listeners, Apple Music wins on audio quality at base price. Apple includes Hi-Res Lossless at $10.99/month, while Amazon Music charges $12.99/month for the equivalent Unlimited tier with HD/Ultra HD audio.
Can I move my Amazon Music playlists to Spotify?
Yes. Soundiiz, TuneMyMusic, and FreeYourMusic all transfer playlists between Amazon Music, Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, and Tidal. Free tiers cover one-shot transfers up to a few hundred tracks.
What is the cheapest Amazon Music alternative?
SoundCloud Go at $4.99/month and Pandora Plus at $4.99/month tie for the cheapest paid subscription. Spotify and YouTube Music free tiers are genuinely free with ads.
Which alternative works on Echo speakers?
Spotify, Apple Music, Pandora, SiriusXM, and iHeartRadio all integrate with Alexa on Echo devices. Amazon Music remains the smoothest by default, but the others work well after initial setup.
Do these services have audiobooks like Amazon Music?
Spotify Premium includes 15 hours of audiobook listening per month. Apple Music does not include audiobooks (Apple Books handles them separately). YouTube Music, Tidal, Deezer, SoundCloud, and Pandora do not include audiobook listening.