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One Tech Tip: How to move your music library to another streaming platform

Business

One Tech Tip: How to move your music library to another streaming platform
Business

Business

One Tech Tip: How to move your music library to another streaming platform

2025-09-26 00:17 Last Updated At:00:20

LONDON (AP) — Want to switch to Apple Music because you can't find your favorite indie band on Spotify? Or maybe you're on Amazon Music but saw a new subscriber offer on Tidal that's too good to pass up.

There are a variety of reasons to change music providers. But if you're thinking about it, and you're worried about losing your library of saved songs and personalized playlists, fear not: there are ways to bring all of it with you.

Many music streaming services don’t make it obvious — often burying instructions deep in FAQs and making the process arduous — but they do offer options to help migrate your collection.

Apple made it easier last month when it quietly rolled out a new feature allowing users to import libraries from rival sites. Having Apple officially incorporate the feature might give reluctant users the confidence to move.

Some pointers to help you along with your musical migration.

The iPhone maker recently published a help page to walk users through the process of importing libraries into Apple Music.

The feature, buried in your settings, is provided by a third-party service called Songshift. It's currently available to users in Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Mexico, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States.

To use it, you'll need an Apple Music account and the latest version of iOS or the Android Apple Music app.

On iPhone, go to Settings, then Apps, then Music. Tap “Transfer Music from Other Music Services” to pop up a list of various streaming services. Android users can follow a similar process. Transfers can also be done through a web browser at music.apple.com.

After choosing a service, another screen appears, prompting you to log into the target account.

Now you get a menu with options to import “All Songs and Albums" as well as “All Playlists." If you don't want all your playlists, you can untick the ones you don't want. However, you can't pick individual songs and albums.

Apple Music will then replicate your library based on your choices.

Importing my Spotify library, with about 150 playlists, went fairly smoothly, although the process took about half an hour because the service also downloaded around 1,230 songs and albums to my iPhone.

I had assumed that ticking “All Songs and Albums” meant that Apple Music would mirror the handful of music I had downloaded to my Spotify app, but it also downloaded all 63 albums in my Spotify library and the 440 songs on my Liked Songs list, which I normally listen to via streaming. If you don’t want to download everything, unselect that option before you start.

Also note that Apple says playlists "created by the music service” can't be transferred, so I couldn't bring Spotify-curated lists like This is Taylor Swift or Alternative 80s with me.

It also meant that my Liked Songs list, which Spotify generates for every user — and a list I've been adding to over the years — couldn't be replicated. Any downloaded songs were just dumped into Apple Music's library.

After this story was first published, reader Linda Feaster wrote in with a workaround: create your own playlist and then add all the tracks from the Spotify playlist. It could be tedious if there are hundreds of songs but should do the trick.

If you're tempted to try out the tool, note that it probably won't work the same way with every service. Apple warns that what can be transferred is up to the source platform. Playlists made by others, such as BBC Music’s The Sounds of 1994, for example, did make it over.

After the move is done, you'll have 30 days to review songs that aren't available or don't have an exact match in Apple's catalog, and choose from any alternate versions.

Most of the other big music streaming platforms offer ways to transfer your library to their site. They mostly rely on standalone third-party services that have been around for a while, are free to use, and don't need app integration to work.

Tidal and Deezer both direct users on their websites to one such service, Tune My Music, which works with popular platforms like Spotify as well as a host of lesser known sites.

Amazon Music's webpage has dedicated buttons for Tune My Music and two similar services, Songshift and Soundiiz.

Google also advises third-party services for YouTube Music users who want to import or export playlists, albums, artists and tracks. However, for Apple Music users who want to move to YouTube Music, the process is different. You'll have to sign in to Apple Music and request a transfer a copy of your data, then export it directly to YouTube Music.

“The transfer process may take several hours if you have many playlists," Google warns on its support page.

Spotify says it's currently testing a way for users to transfer their libraries and expects to provide more details soon.

It was super easy to move my Spotify library to Deezer using Tune My Music.

I clicked a button on the Deezer website that got the process started by prompting me to log in to my Spotify account. Then a menu came up with pre-ticked options on what I could migrate: my entire library, favorite songs, favorite albums, favorite artists and any or all of my 150 playlists.

I decided to move it all over, which amounted to more than 16,359 items. It took about five minutes. Unlike Apple Music, Deezer didn't download any files, it just copied lists.

A few dozen songs went missing, Tune My Music said.

“It usually happens because the song doesn't exist on the new platform, or it's named a bit differently and couldn't be matched,” it said, but added that I could download a list of missing tracks to look for them on the new platform.

After you finish transferring your music library, don't forget that it's still on the original platform and hasn't been deleted.

Most third-party transfer services are free, but also offer premium levels with more features, such as instant syncing of libraries between multiple streaming sites.

AP Business Writer James Pollard in New York contributed to this report.

Is there a tech topic that you think needs explaining? Write to us at onetechtip@ap.org with your suggestions for future editions of One Tech Tip.

FILE - Buildings are reflected behind the logo at an Apple Store, in downtown Chicago, Oct. 19, 2017. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato, File)

FILE - Buildings are reflected behind the logo at an Apple Store, in downtown Chicago, Oct. 19, 2017. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato, File)

BERLIN (AP) — A humpback whale's likely final days in the Baltic Sea have been livestreamed across the globe as multiple rescue efforts failed to coax it back into deeper waters while the marine mammal gets sicker and weaker.

Nicknamed Timmy by local media, many fear the whale may soon die in the Baltic Sea's shallow waters near the eastern German town of Wismar.

The animal faces long odds in finding its way back out into the North Sea, a journey of several hundred kilometers (miles), and then to the Atlantic Ocean.

Here's what to know:

Timmy was first spotted swimming in the region on March 3. It is not clear why the whale swam into the Baltic Sea, far from its natural habitat in the Atlantic Ocean. Some experts say the animal may have lost its way while swimming after a shoal of herring or during migration.

Since then, the mammal has become repeatedly stranded in shallow waters. It's in clear distress, breathing irregularly and mostly barely moving for days.

Timmy is also suffering from a bad skin condition, related to the Baltic Sea’s low salt content, and rescuers have applied kilos (pounds) of zinc ointment.

On top of all that, the whale keeps swimming in the wrong direction when it does move.

Local media have produced dayslong livestreams to feed the outsized public attention over the fate of the whale. Online newspapers have blasted push alerts with the smallest developments about Timmy’s health.

Activists have staged protests on the beach in Wismar calling for the animal’s liberation, while influencers have debated whether the best way to help the animal is to let it die in peace or keep trying to assist its return to the Atlantic Ocean.

Interest has been so strong that police had put up a 500-meter (1,640 foot) protection zone to keep curious bystanders from getting too close and stressing the stranded whale even more.

Despite these efforts, a 67-year-old woman jumped off a boat on the weekend trying to get close to the whale before she was stopped.

Attempts to refloat the mammal with the help of police boats, excavators and inflatable boats had temporarily freed it. But the whale, which measures 12 to 15 meters (39 to 49 feet) long and weighs 12 metric tons (nearly 26,500 pounds), never found its way back to the North Sea.

Experts then came up with a sophisticated plan to use air cushions to lift the animal onto a tarp, which would have been secured to two pontoons and attached to a tugboat. State officials approved the private initiative, but the whale started swimming again Monday as the tide rose. Boats attempted to guide the mammal toward the right path, though some have lost all hope.

Thilo Maack, a marine biologist at Greenpeace, told The Associated Press the efforts are actually causing the animal severe stress.

“I believe the whale will die very soon now. And I would also like to raise the question: What is actually so bad about that?" he said. "Yes, animals live, animals die. This animal is really, really very, very, very sick. And it has decided to seek rest.”

A humpback whale is stuck off near the island of Poel, Weitendorf-Hof, Germany, Thursday, April 16, 2026. (Philip Dulian/dpa via AP)

A humpback whale is stuck off near the island of Poel, Weitendorf-Hof, Germany, Thursday, April 16, 2026. (Philip Dulian/dpa via AP)

Helpers approach a humpback whale that is stuck off near the island of Poel, Weitendorf-Hof, Germany, Thursday, April 16, 2026. (Philip Dulian/dpa via AP)

Helpers approach a humpback whale that is stuck off near the island of Poel, Weitendorf-Hof, Germany, Thursday, April 16, 2026. (Philip Dulian/dpa via AP)

Two helpers approach the humpback whale off the island of Poel, Germany, Friday, April 17, 2026. (Bernd Wüstneck/dpa via AP)

Two helpers approach the humpback whale off the island of Poel, Germany, Friday, April 17, 2026. (Bernd Wüstneck/dpa via AP)

A work pontoon with a special excavator and smaller escort boats are in use near the stranded humpback whale off the island of Poel, near Wismar, Germany, Sunday, April 19, 2026. (Stefan Sauer/dpa via AP)

A work pontoon with a special excavator and smaller escort boats are in use near the stranded humpback whale off the island of Poel, near Wismar, Germany, Sunday, April 19, 2026. (Stefan Sauer/dpa via AP)

The humpback whale, nicknamed Timmy, remains trapped near the island of Poel, Germany, Friday, April 17, 2026. (Jens Büttner/dpa via AP)

The humpback whale, nicknamed Timmy, remains trapped near the island of Poel, Germany, Friday, April 17, 2026. (Jens Büttner/dpa via AP)

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