13 Free MP3 Players for Windows

13 Free MP3 Players for Windows

We live in a digital age. It’s only appropriate that we listen to digital music. We want our music where we spend our time, and for many of us these days that’s on our computers.

This article was previously published on the AudioJungle blog, which has moved on to a new format in 2010. We’ll be bringing you an article from the AudioJungle archives each week.

Do you remember the good old days? Our lounge rooms would be full of racks of CDs, cassette tapes, and even records. We’d pick an album or two that we wanted to listen to, hit play, and listen to the songs in order. We were impressed with auto-reverse cassette players, and CD players that would play one album’s songs in a random order. The last CD player I bought can play three CDs at once, and play songs from any of the CDs in random order. I thought it was amazing.

Today, most of us have our entire music collections on our computer – hundreds or possibly thousands of albums. The flexibility of playing a single album, or all the songs by an artist or group of artists, or just shuffle through our entire collection, seems normal. And most of us take our music collection – or a big hunk of it – with us on portable media players.

Many of us listen to our music using fairly standard software: either Windows Media Player or iTunes. But there are literally hundreds of similar programs available for Windows, most of which are free. They all do the same basic job, but may have unique features or a different interface.

I perused many of the players that cost a bit of money, but couldn’t find any that gave me a convincing reason to pay up. So I’ve only included free software here (although some of the players have “pro” versions). However, if you paid good money for your favorite player, I’d love to hear in the comments what made it worthwhile.

Here are 13 free MP3 players for Windows.


1. Windows Media Player

Windows Media Player comes with your computer, and works pretty well, so many of us use it and enjoy it. It has all the features you’d expect, including the ability to rip songs from your CDs, a pretty good music library, and enough skins to give you a look that suits you.

Since you’re likely to be aware of WMP already, I won’t say much more about it. I’ve never really been a fan, but that’s probably because I love exploring the alternatives. If you are a fan of WMP, please let me know why in the comments. You might give me a whole new appreciation for the program!


2. iTunes

I first used iTunes after buying an iPod around five years ago. If you own an iPod, using iTunes is virtually a requirement. I was pleasantly surprised by the experience.

iTunes (like most Mac products) is attractive, easy to use, and has most of the features you need. I especially liked the way iTunes handles smart playlists, and created a handful of them, including songs I had never played, and songs in specific genres that had three or more stars.

Although the program is quite big, I have recommended it to many computer novices because it is easy to use, makes it easy to use more advanced functionality, and most of all, it is free!


3. Winamp

Winamp was my favourite for many years, and remains a favourite of many people, including a teenager I ran into yesterday. It is light, skinnable, and covers the basics very well. And you can add more features through installing plug-ins.

In the last few years Winamp has been adding features to compete better with the alternatives, including the ability to sync with iPods and import iTunes libraries, song recommendations, album art, and podcast support. The pro version includes ripping and burning CDs.


4. Songbird

Songbird is an open source music player that seems designed to look very much like iTunes. Like Winamp, you can extend its feature set using plug-ins. You can read more about Songbird from our previous article, 10 Things Songbird Does that iTunes Can’t.


5. Media Monkey

MediaMonkey is one of my favorite Windows music players. Formerly called Songs-DB, its emphasis is accessing your music through a useful tree-based database. MediaMonkey calls itself “the music organizer for the serious collector.” I agree with that description.

While it excels at organizing and tagging music, MediaMonkey can also sync with a wide range of devices, handle podcasts, and report on your statistics.


6. Foobar2000

Though I’ve never used Foobar2000 as my main media player, I’ve heard great things from its fans for many years. They strongly believe that Foobar is the best music player in existence.

Foobar2000 supports many audio formats, and is incredibly customizable, including skinning and keyboard shortcuts.


7. 1by1

1by1 is a “directory player” – basically a very simple music player that just plays all of the songs in a folder. I used to include it on the CD when I was sharing some MP3 files with friends. It is very small, very fast, and does not use databases to organize your music.


8. Aqualung

Aqualung claims to be an “advanced” music player that plays audio CDs, internet radio streams and podcasts as well as sound files in just about any audio format and has the feature of inserting no gaps between adjacent tracks. I haven’t tried it yet, but it looks very promising, playing a wide range of audio formats on a wide range of platforms.

Some of its unique features include multiple playlists (similar to tabbed browsing), command line control, use of LADSPA plug-ins, and the use of an XML-based database for storing information about your music. Looks like a great player for geeks, and possibly for the rest of us.


9. Billy

Billy is another light player. The biggest complaint about Billy is its lack of skins, but the website counts lack of skins as a feature! Like 1to1, it is designed to play an entire directory of MP3s.


10. Quintessential Music Player

The Quintessential Music Player is a highly skinnable music player that supports a wide variety of music formats. The program can be expanded with plug-ins to enhance playback, encoding, use of effects, tagging and more.


11. Zinf

Zinf is an open source Winamp clone, and was previously called “FreeAmp”. It has features very similar to Winamp, and some nice skins.


12. Spider Player

The Spider Player website calls this product “the ultimate music player”. The feature list is very long, and includes conversion between audio formats, support for a wide range of formats, a lot of customizability, support for custom MIDI soundfonts, streaming audio support, and a DSP effects manager. However, it does not support DRM-protected files.


13. dBpoweramp

dBpoweramp includes a wide range of helpful audio utilities. These include “CD ripping for those who take ripping seriously”, “audio conversion perfected”, “CD burning made easy” and “batch ripping on the Industrial Scale”. It can play music, too. The software has good audio codec support, and was one of my favorite tools a few years ago.

In writing this article I came across hundreds of other programs. Some may have been very good, many didn’t look like there were. The programs above are among the best of them, but may not include all of the best. If you have a favorite media player I haven’t included, please let us know about it in the comments.

  • Sven !!

    That is free too !!
    for Windows
    http://www.bang-olufsen.com/beoplayer/software-downloads

    i like it !!

  • David

    I use aTunes, an open-source multi platform music player with knowledge comparable to iTunes (http://www.atunes.org/)

  • http://ya.ru Andrey

    aimp also nice one

  • http://twitter.com/EricThoolen Eric

    I am using Winamp since I joined the WWW, and I can’t see me changing … ever! ;-)

  • Mark

    You forgot vlc!!

  • Jared

    Winamp for me!

    On another note, I run a 2.8 i7 with 6GB of triple channel RAM, and I find Songbird to be obnoxiously slow/delayed, bloated, and all-round painful to use; even with very few plug-ins. In the past I’ve described it as, “That player I think I hate more than iTunes.”

  • damien

    everybody forgot about free AIMP2 and what i can say it is the best one. the best feature for me is the possibility to copy files via drag and drop (draging from playlist) !!!

  • LC

    Still using Winamp (with 4front eq10 : http://www.yohng.com/eq10.html )

    Most of all it reads all my files (ogg, mpc, flac .. even long dead vqf), it’s quick, i like the efficient mix between media library and playlist, controlling it in the windows taskbar (very important) etc

  • http://www.oringz.com niko

    Foobar ftw! I was a hardcore winamp user for years but then I found foobar.

    It was not love at first sight but I gave it a chance and now I’m just in love with it. It seduced me with simple things that are intuitive and at hand, like converting between formats (right click and choose from the menu), easy search (Ctrl+F), undo (Ctrl + Z) if you mistakenly lost your playlist by double clicking on an mp3 in your file browser, and so much more.

  • http://kisuki.net Tsu

    While foobar might seem alien to the average PC user, those who have the know-how will find it deliciously skinnable and very light. It allows you to assign shortcut keys too, for nearly any process. It retains playlist data even after closing the program, and managing/tagging music is very easy with the help of the media library and some extensions, such as Masstagger.

  • http://ashisharma.daportfolio.com Ashish Sharma

    I like WMP 11 d most with Media Monkey….

    In WMP … only a bonus pack & DFX plugin is sufficient to make it powerful …!!
    it is slow but having features like cross fading adjusment, WOW Effect, MAke any song slow & fast with a click, managing & searching in library is easy, sync function is quite well and many others….

    Skins, Visualizations & colours make it joyful to use ….

    Ya … media monkey is also best … for tagging & sync iPOD etc. …..

    VLC Player is also a best player which can play music (whole folder also) in a click ….

    I think … these 3 are more than enough for my pc ….!!! :)

  • http://twitter.com/asharer Asharer

    Even now, i would like to choose Windows Media Player, ignore the supported format issue, WMP is the best, it takes much less computer resource than any other Media Players.

  • http://www.talkingspeaker.com/ Free MP3 Player

    Don’t forget, sometimes people just need a simple, free player for web audio marketing on websites and auctions, without all the fancy playlists and distractions. :)

  • some one

    you forgt vlc…for me vlc and itunes are the best!

  • Arafat

    VLC is the best player.

  • Jorge

    No one has mentioned XMPlay. Must easily be one of the lightest player around, no installation required and lots of addons and skins, just pop’em in the xmplay directory. No cpu usage, love it.

  • 8000860

    Where is AiMP?

  • Ime

    MediaPlayer???….ITunes???…

    …how did you menage to get these two dinosaurs on the list, and to exclude AIMP and bunch of other players that surpass these two in every way???
    …you should do some research before writing an article if you want readers to take you seriously…cheers

  • Blaire Nadal

    @80860d6ebe2dc336534a85b4887d9e86:disqus : They’re the classics.. which means they’re timeless. But Xbox is joining the fray.. thanks to Windows 8.