Best Music Streaming Service in 2026: Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, Tidal, Amazon Music Compared

Five major music-streaming services compared by published 2026 pricing tiers and audio-quality posture. Every claim links to the vendor's pricing page.

Quick answer
  • Apple Music ($10.99/mo Individual), YouTube Music ($10.99/mo), Tidal ($10.99/mo), and Amazon Music Unlimited ($10.99/mo) all sit at the same Individual price. Spotify Premium Individual is $12.99/mo (Jan 2026 increase).
  • Apple Music, Tidal, and Amazon Music Unlimited include lossless FLAC / ALAC at up to 24-bit/192 kHz at no extra cost. Spotify still caps at 320 kbps Ogg Vorbis (lossy). YouTube Music caps at 256 kbps AAC.
  • Family tiers (6 accounts) cluster around $16.99/mo for Apple/YouTube/Tidal/Amazon; Spotify Family is $21.99/mo (more expensive for the same headcount).
Best overall: apple-music
Methodology

We compared each service's published 2026 pricing tiers and audio-quality posture (lossless or not, max sample rate, included spatial-audio formats). We do not run our own listening tests — perceived audio quality depends heavily on the listener's hardware, room, and listening conditions, and any opinion would not be reproducible. We focus on the part that does not depend on listener equipment: published price and published audio specs. Sources accessed 2026-04-30.

  • Individual tier price25%

    Cheapest individual paid tier in USD per month, per the vendor pricing page.

  • Family tier price20%

    Family / multi-account tier price and number of accounts included.

  • Lossless audio25%

    Whether lossless FLAC / ALAC at CD quality or higher is included at no extra cost.

  • Spatial / immersive audio10%

    Dolby Atmos / 360 Reality Audio support and at what tier.

  • Free tier10%

    Whether a free tier is published (Spotify is the only major free tier in this comparison).

  • Bundle availability10%

    Whether the service bundles with other products (Amazon Prime, Apple One, YouTube Premium).

Testing window
2026-04-25 → 2026-04-30
Data sources
  • Vendor pricing pages (Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, Tidal, Amazon Music)
Written by
Subger Editorial Team
Comparison desk

We read every public music-streaming pricing page so you do not have to. Every claim links to its source. Editorial standards: see /about.

Last tested
30. 4. 2026
Next review 30. 7. 2026

Our take on each product

spotify

Recommended

Largest catalog and best discovery; only service in the comparison with a real free tier; most expensive Family at $21.99/mo.

Pros
  • Free tier (ad-supported) is the only one among major services — the rest gate at the paid tier
  • Largest catalog among Western streamers; podcasts integrated in the same app
  • Discovery / algorithmic playlists (Discover Weekly, Daily Mix) are widely cited as the strongest in the category
Cons
  • Audio caps at 320 kbps Ogg Vorbis — lossy. Apple Music / Tidal / Amazon Music include lossless FLAC at no extra cost.
  • January 2026 price increase: Individual $11.99→$12.99, Duo $16.99→$18.99, Family $19.99→$21.99 (per spotify.com/us/premium)
  • Family tier $21.99/mo is materially more expensive than the $16.99/mo Apple / YouTube / Tidal / Amazon Family tiers
Best for: Users who weigh discovery + free tier + podcast integration over lossless audio quality

apple-music

Recommended

$10.99/mo Individual with lossless ALAC + Dolby Atmos at no extra cost. Cheapest lossless tier in the comparison.

Pros
  • Apple Lossless ALAC up to 24-bit/192 kHz on supported tracks at no extra cost
  • Spatial Audio with Dolby Atmos included
  • Tight integration with Apple ecosystem (CarPlay, HomePod, Apple Watch, AirPods spatial-audio head tracking)
  • Family $16.99/mo for 6 accounts — same as YouTube / Tidal / Amazon, $5/mo cheaper than Spotify Family
Cons
  • Algorithmic discovery is weaker than Spotify
  • No free tier — Voice plan at $4.99/mo is Siri-only and limited
  • Web app exists but is not the primary client — Apple wants you on a Mac / iPhone
Best for: Apple-ecosystem users who care about lossless and Dolby Atmos at a no-extra-cost price point

youtube-music

Recommended

$10.99/mo Individual, $16.99/mo Family. The YouTube Premium bundle ($13.99/mo) adds ad-free YouTube + offline + background.

Pros
  • $10.99/mo matches Apple / Tidal / Amazon Music
  • YouTube Premium bundle $13.99/mo is the only consumer plan that combines music + ad-free YouTube + Premium video
  • Catalog includes user-uploaded tracks and remixes alongside official label catalog — the broadest fringe / remix coverage
Cons
  • Audio caps at 256 kbps AAC — no lossless tier
  • Discovery weaker than Spotify; recommendations heavily YouTube-watch-history-influenced
  • Web client is good; native mobile apps are functional but less polished than Apple / Spotify
Best for: Heavy YouTube users who would otherwise pay for YouTube Premium anyway; users who want remix / fringe coverage

tidal

Recommended

$10.99/mo Individual with lossless + HiRes Master included. 2024 simplification removed the price gap with the lossy tier.

Pros
  • Lossless FLAC up to 24-bit/192 kHz HiRes Master included at the standard $10.99/mo Individual tier (per tidal.com/pricing)
  • Higher artist payouts than Spotify (per Tidal's published pay-per-stream rate)
  • Family $16.99/mo for 6 accounts
Cons
  • Smaller catalog than Spotify / Apple Music in some genres (mainstream pop occasionally lags release timing)
  • Discovery features less developed than Spotify's algorithmic playlists
Best for: Audiophiles + listeners who want higher artist payouts at a $10.99/mo Individual price

amazon-music-unlimited

Niche pick

$10.99/mo Individual ($9.99 with Prime). Lossless HD + Ultra HD + Dolby Atmos. Single-Device Echo plan $5.99/mo.

Pros
  • $9.99/mo for Amazon Prime members — cheapest lossless among the majors with the Prime discount
  • Lossless HD + Ultra HD + Dolby Atmos / 360 Reality Audio at no extra cost
  • Single-Device plan ($5.99/mo) for one Echo speaker is the cheapest tier of any major service
  • Family $16.99/mo for 6 accounts
Cons
  • Non-Prime price is $10.99/mo — only $1 cheaper than Spotify Individual at the same tier
  • Native mobile / desktop apps are less polished than Apple / Spotify
  • Discovery weaker than Spotify
Best for: Amazon Prime members who want the cheapest lossless tier and use Echo speakers

Recent updates

  1. Truth-pass review

    Re-read every service's published pricing page. Removed prior fabricated speaker-test methodology and unsourced subjective audio claims. Trimmed pillar table from 10 services to 5.

  2. Spotify raised US prices across all paid tiers

    Per spotify.com/us/premium: Individual $11.99→$12.99, Duo $16.99→$18.99, Family $19.99→$21.99, Student $5.99→$6.99 in January 2026.

The full comparison

Service
Cheapest individual paid tier on the vendor's pricing page.
Family / multi-account tier price.
Lossless includedWhether lossless audio is included at the standard paid tier with no extra cost.
Dolby Atmos / spatialWhether Dolby Atmos / Sony 360 Reality Audio is included.
Free tierWhether a free ad-supported tier is offered.
Spotify
12.9921.99No (320 kbps lossy)NoYes
Apple Music
10.9916.99Yes (ALAC up to 24/192)YesNo
YouTube Music
10.9916.99No (256 kbps AAC)NoYes (ad-supported)
Tidal
10.9916.99Yes (FLAC up to 24/192)Yes (Atmos / Sony 360)No
Amazon Music Unlimited
10.9916.99Yes (HD + Ultra HD)YesNo (Prime tier limited)

Amazon Music Unlimited is $9.99/mo for Amazon Prime members; the table shows the non-Prime $10.99/mo price for parity. Spotify is the only service with a meaningful free tier; YouTube Music's free tier is ad-supported with limited mobile features (no background play, no offline). Sources accessed 2026-04-30.

Frequently asked questions

Which music streaming service has the best audio quality?

Apple Music, Tidal, and Amazon Music Unlimited all include lossless FLAC / ALAC at up to 24-bit/192 kHz at the standard $10.99/mo individual tier. Spotify caps at 320 kbps Ogg Vorbis (lossy). YouTube Music caps at 256 kbps AAC. Of the three lossless services, audio quality at the file level is essentially identical — the audible difference depends almost entirely on the listener's headphones / speakers / DAC.

Is Apple Music or Spotify better in 2026?

Apple Music wins on price ($10.99 Individual vs $12.99 Spotify after the January 2026 increase) and on audio quality (ALAC lossless + Dolby Atmos at no extra cost). Spotify wins on discovery (Discover Weekly + Daily Mix algorithmic playlists are stronger), free tier (Apple Music has no real free tier), and podcast integration. Family tiers diverge sharply: Apple Music Family $16.99 vs Spotify Family $21.99 — $5/mo for the same household size.

Is Spotify Premium worth $12.99/mo if I have Apple Music or YouTube Music?

It depends on what you optimize for. If you want the strongest discovery / algorithmic playlists and use podcasts, Spotify Premium is worth it. If you want lossless audio (Apple Music / Tidal / Amazon Music) at a $2/mo lower Individual price, switch. The catalog overlap is high enough that catalog is rarely the deciding factor.

What is the cheapest way to get music streaming for a family?

Family tiers are roughly $16.99/mo for Apple Music, YouTube Music, Tidal, and Amazon Music Unlimited (6 accounts each). Spotify Family is $21.99/mo. Apple Music is bundled in Apple One Family ($24.95/mo) which includes Music + TV+ + Arcade + iCloud+ — for households deep in Apple, the bundle is the cheapest way to get all four.

Is YouTube Premium worth it for the music?

YouTube Premium ($13.99/mo Individual, $22.99/mo Family) bundles ad-free YouTube + offline + background play with YouTube Music Premium. If you watch YouTube enough that the ad-removal alone is worth $3/mo, the bundle pays for itself versus paying $10.99/mo for YouTube Music alone. If you do not use YouTube heavily, standalone YouTube Music at $10.99/mo is cheaper.

Can I switch services without losing my playlists?

Yes — third-party tools (SongShift on iOS, Soundiiz, FreeYourMusic, Tune My Music) migrate playlists between services. Migration is usually 80–95% match rate; some tracks fail to map due to regional licensing or unique remixes. Most services offer a 1-month free trial, so the standard playbook is: trial the new service, migrate playlists, decide whether to cancel the old one before the trial ends.

Find the right pick for you

Tell us what you optimise for — we will point at the music service whose published positions best match.

  1. 1. What matters most?
  2. 2. Individual or family?

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