


£9.99/$9.99/AU$9.99 per month seems to be the going rate for individual streaming memberships and Amazon Music Unlimited follows suit. Amazon regularly offers free trials that can run from 30 days to three months during some promotions so potential subscribers can always try before they buy. If you want to drill down into the catalogue or want to access higher-quality tracks, then you need Music Unlimited. This stripped-down version of Amazon Music Unlimited does give you ad-free access to Amazon's entire music catalogue but only in SD quality and you can only play via shuffling artists, albums, or playlists. 1 month plan - £9.99 per month (£9.99 total cost) (opens in new tab)Īmazon's music streaming offering is split into Amazon Music Free, Amazon Music Prime and Amazon Music Unlimited.Īmazon Music free won't cost you a penny and will give you basic access to "thousands of stations and top playlists" and millions of podcasts.Īmazon Prime subscribers have access to Amazon Music Prime for free.Still, Amazon Unlimited Music might be a better option for those who don't have Apple devices.Amazon Music Unlimited subscription options: Other popular music streaming services like Apple Music also provide access to high-quality audio at $10.99 per month. While writing this article, Amazon is running a promotional offer wherein it lets new users experience the service free for 30 days, with an option to cancel anytime. Nonetheless, the library and quality of audio tracks included with Amazon Prime membership should be enough for regular users. The subscription offers Prime Music and Prime Video for accessing audio and video content on demand, but it does not include Amazon Music Unlimited. Users might have to pay sales taxes in some states, which could increase the effective price of the subscription. On the other hand, students get the service at $7.49 per month and $69 a year. Currently, Amazon Prime membership costs $14.99 per month or $139 per year in the United States.
