4 Best Music Streaming Services (2025): Spotify, Apple Music, and More Compared

4 Best Music Streaming Services (2025): Spotify, Apple Music, and More Compared

Oct 28, 2025 10:00 AM

The Best Music Streaming Services to Get Your Groove On

Plunge into the stream with the best apps to discover music, share it with friends, and rock out.

All products featured on WIRED are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links. Learn more.

Featured in this article

Best Overall

Spotify

Read more

The Audiophile Pick

Tidal

Read more

For Apple Aficionados

Apple Music

Read more

Surprisingly Good on Desktop

YouTube Music

Read more

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.


Credit: Original Article