Apple Music Vs Spotify Premium Vs Pandora One: Which is Best?

It’s been 15 years since Pandora, one of the forerunners of the internet radio craze, was founded, and the landscape has changed drastically since its debut. Now there are more providers, more subscription options, more ways to listen, and millions more songs. Apple’s recent entry into the scene with Apple Music has really shaken up the field, but how does it stack up against Pandora and Spotify? How good is Apple Music? Is Pandora still the king of internet radio? Is Spotify still on its meteoric rise?

Let’s take a look.

Apple Music Vs Spotify Premium Vs Pandora One

The Grandfather of Internet Radio: Pandora

Pandora’s been offering music streaming for a very long time now, and its name has become synonymous with internet radio. Using the service is simple: you choose an artist or song to be used as the basis for a radio station, and Pandora uses information from the Music Genome Project to identify similar songs to play on that station.

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Listeners can give a thumbs-up or thumbs-down to any song to give feedback to Pandora so it can better personalize the station. Users also get a limited number of skips, so that a song can be skipped without giving it a thumbs-down.

Pandora can be used for free through their Flash-based web interface (the inherent insecurities in Flash and its use as a malware transmission vector may dissuade some security-conscious users away from it), or users can choose to sign up for the $4.99 / month Pandora One plan. Benefits included in the premium plan include ad-free playing and more skips. Both the free and paid plans include the use of mobile apps on iPhone, Android, and other operating systems.

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Although Pandora presents the best price for music streaming, it falls short on music selection: with only 1.5 million songs, it’s far beyond Spotify and Apple Music. Pandora’s emphasis on radio-style playing may appeal to many users, but others may prefer the ability to listen through entire albums with the ease that’s offered by other services.

However, Pandora’s connection to the Music Genome Project does make it an intriguing option, as there are thousands of potential traits for each song, meaning the radio stations can be customized to very specific types of music.

The Rising Star: Spotify

Spotify has made a huge name for itself very quickly with great branding and a phenomenal music selection. Its 30 million songs absolutely blow Pandora out of the water, and their exclusives and wide range of celebrity-curated playlists make it a popular choice for listeners both young and old.

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Like Pandora, Spotify can be used for free with ads, though it’s run through a desktop app instead of a browser. The business model is similar; users are given a limited number of skips and have to listen to ads unless they sign up for the $9.99/month premium option. With this subscription comes unlimited skips, ad-free listening, and access to Spotify’s mobile apps. You can also download music for offline access on your computer or your mobile device, which is very convenient for when you don’t have service but still need your tunes.

Spotify offers both the radio-station-like listening that Pandora made its name with as well as playlist and full album streaming, making it a very versatile platform. It also lets you manage your music collection on your computer, meaning it can serve as a replacement for iTunes.

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The inability to use Spotify’s mobile apps without paying for a subscription can be irritating, though if you don’t listen to music on the go very much, it might not be a big deal. With a subscription price that costs twice as much as Pandora, whether or not Spotify premium is a good deal depends largely on how much you’re likely to use the mobile apps and offline access. The significantly larger music selection is also a big factor.

To help more people get access to their premium plan, Spotify offers a 50% student discount as well as a family membership plan in which family members of a premium subscriber also get 50% off of their subscription fees.

The Newcomer: Apple Music

Apple Music may be the newcomer to the scene, but because of iTunes’ and Apple’s dominating presence in the tech market, it immediately became a serious contender in the online music streaming space. And by combining a number of features from previous music apps, Apple has created a service that could be tough to beat.

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The Apple Music catalog contains over 30 million songs, putting it right alongside Spotify for the amount of music you can access (though it doesn’t cover every song that you can buy through iTunes). If you’ve used iTunes before, you know that they get a lot of early releases, exclusives, and bonus material, and that’s all available on Apple Music as well. You can stream music, listen to celebrity-curated radio stations, and get the low-down on artists using the Connect social platform.

At $9.99/month, Apple Music costs the same as Spotify Premium, and offers many of the same features, like offline access to chosen content, mobile apps (even on Android!), and unlimited skips. It includes the features of iTunes Match and Beats Radio, and adds a few more besides, making it a very well-rounded and full-featured music streaming solution.

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Of course, one of the biggest advantages of using Apple Music is that it’s already deeply integrated with existing Apple products. It’s accessed through the iTunes and Music apps that come with every Mac, iPhone, and iPad, it’s paid for using your Apple ID, and it integrates all of the music you already have in your collection on your Apple products.

And one of the coolest features is that Siri will be getting a lot smarter when it comes to music—tell her what you want to hear, what you want to hear next, ask her to play the top songs from a specific year, tell you want to hear “more like this” to get related songs, and a lot more.

Which Music Streaming Service is the Best?

As you can see, there are a lot of factors to consider when choosing a music streaming service—and which one is best definitely depends on what you want to get out of it. If you only listen to music occasionally, Pandora’s $4.99 plan might be best, as it’s half the cost of Spotify and Apple Music. If you listen more often, and you value a high number of songs, Spotify or Apple Music are probably the best way to go.

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Choosing between Spotify and Apple Music is tough. Spotify is well-established, it’s well-liked, and it’s very familiar. Apple Music still feels a little experimental, even though iTunes and Apple have completely dominated the online music scene for years. There are also some less-than-stellar points in Apple’s past, like Beats Radio and Ping. It looks like they’ve learned from their mistakes and created a great service, but it’s hard to know without trying it out.

Fortunately, both Spotify and Apple offer free trials; you can try Spotify Premium for free for 30 days, and you can get a full three months of Apple Music to try it out. The best way to figure out which service is best for you is to try them—see if your favorite artists are available, check out the apps, make sure that it’s easy to get the type of music playing experience that you want, and eventually one of these services will come out on top.

Now, if you can just figure out what that song is so you can find it.

SEE ALSO: 14 Legal and Free Music Download Websites

Which music streaming service do you use Apple Music, Spotify or Pandora? What made you choose that one over any of the other options? Share your thoughts below!

comment Comments 9
  • BASSCANNON says:

    How bout sound quality??? Pandora’s sound quality is shit compared to apple for sure! Facts! Can’t speak for Spotify as I have never used their services

  • Peter says:

    I only play music on my home stereo. Never on my iPhone, what’s the point, it sucks! iTunes works great for home systems and the only problem is that you can’t download every song in the world to your iTunes Library. Apple Music only works with iCloud and you have to give all your friends and family your AppleID account and of course pay more. What a JOKE! iTunes Library Airplays to my Pioneer Stereo and is awesome. I can access it from any iPhone, and any iPad. Why can’t Apple figure this out for Apple Music!???

  • Pete says:

    Probably not gonna go with Apple even tho I have a huge iTunes library. I just cannot stand the complexity and inconvenience of iCloud woven into every aspect of Apple. Why on earth would I give my AppleID to anyone who walks in my door? iTunes is perfect. Anyone can access it on my network. My stereo has AirPlay built-in and it works great. The problem is Apple Music does not integrate with any of my existing system. Again, no way I’m giving my AppleID to everyone who comes over! WTF is wrong with Apple!?? No one wants iCloud Library access controlling your music! And too complicated!!! I’ll go with Pandora.

  • Michael Price says:

    Pandora >>>> Better

  • Angelbob77 says:

    I’ve never used Apple Music but can see that it would be better for iPhone users. As a Android and windows user, Spotify is a lot more convenient for me. I have found that it offers me the radio aspects as well as being able to listen to albums and playlists. They also make amazing curated playlists and daily ones that have songs that are related to the songs you have listened to.

  • Michael says:

    So I have tried all three. At the moment I have settled on Apple Music and Pandora. I have both as Premium Services so NO ADS!
    I switched from Spotify to Apple Music because I liked the way Apple Music displayed.
    Pandora’s great advantage is that I don’t have to think, it makes the choice for me.
    Apple Music and for that matter Spotify are both great because I can emerge myself in an artist and listen to the whole catalogue.
    They all serve a purpose and are generally good at what they do. All of that said, I do miss putting a CD on or for that matter playing vinyl!

    • Alma says:

      I have tried all 3 as well, and I have to agree with you. I like Apple Music and Pandora the most. Apple Music is great. Shazam allows me to look for a song and instantly add the song in my music, when I download my favorite tunes in my music it syncs to my computer at home as well, I can look into any band’s album and pause, repeat or skip any song as much as I want.
      Pandora works when I am at work or clening, is good when I just wanna have a playlist with stuff that I already like

  • Casey Mills says:

    Pandora. I’ve tried all of the others including The Beats attempt. I still do Google Music for specifics, but their “radio stations” do not compare. Neither does apple’s etc. Pandora is good at matching preference. Yeah there’s some I wish they could do better, like something in between a thumbs down and a skip, like when they play a “live” song… But overall, they get it. It’s a much better mix.
    If specifics is what people want, like only listening to 1 or 2 specific artists then no, Pandora won’t cut it. It’s not for that. That’s not comparing apples to apples.

  • queenmarie88 says:

    You said Pandora was BEYOND Spotify and Apple with it’s 1.5 million songs. You mean BEHIND.

    I have tried both Pandora One and Spotify Premium and I have to say Spotify is waaaaaaay better–for me anyway. I like to make my own playlists and listen to full albums.

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