Best AI Music Apps for Android in 2025
The best AI singing and AI music apps available on Android in 2025 — compared by features, quality, and price.
Best AI Music Apps for Android in 2025
The AI music app landscape on Android is similar to iPhone in shape but different in specifics. Some apps invest equally in both platforms, some have weaker Android versions, and a few are essentially iOS-first or web-first with Android as an afterthought.
Here's what you actually get on Android, broken down by use case.
AI Cover Songs (Your Voice on Real Songs)
VibeSing is available on Android with feature parity to iOS. The voice cloning workflow, the trending song library, the share pages, and Band Mode all work the same way. Android users get the same free tier (10 songs, 1 voice clone) and the same paid plan options.
The Android app uses the same web tech under the hood for the more complex interfaces, so on older or lower-end Android devices, performance can be a step behind the iOS app. On modern Android phones, the experience is essentially equivalent.
Covers.ai has an Android app but it's lighter than the iOS version. Most serious users end up on the web interface, which works the same on Android browsers.
AI Music Generation (Text-to-Song)
Suno and Udio are both web-first tools. Their Android apps exist but are minimal — essentially mobile-friendly wrappers around the web experience. If you're serious about text-to-song generation, you'll likely end up on a laptop.
That said, the Android apps are functional for casual use. You can type a prompt, generate a song, and share it from your phone. The experience just isn't as polished as the web version.
There's no Android-only AI music generation tool that competes with these two at the same level. The category is dominated by web-first platforms.
Karaoke (Live Singing)
This is where Android has the most competitive options, partly because the Asian karaoke apps have invested heavily in the platform.
Smule has a full Android app with feature parity to iOS. The recording interface, the social features, and the song catalog are all there. It's not quite as polished as the iOS version, but it's close.
StarMaker is excellent on Android. The app is mature, the community is active, and the duets and group features work well. For many Android users, StarMaker is the default karaoke app.
WeSing has a strong Android presence, particularly in markets where Android dominates. The Asian pop catalog is comprehensive and the app is well-optimized for a range of Android devices.
Yokee is lightweight and works well on older Android phones, which is its main selling point.
Voice Tools (Vocal Processing)
Voloco has a solid Android app. The real-time processing works well on modern Android devices, and the AI features are functional. It's a useful tool for creators who want to process vocals on the go.
Voicemod is desktop-first. The Android app is limited and most of the value is in the desktop version.
Web-Only AI Music Tools
Several AI music platforms don't have Android apps at all and aren't planning them. These work fine in mobile browsers, but they're not "apps" in the traditional sense.
Kits.ai is web-only. There's no Android app, and the mobile browser experience is functional but not great. This is a desktop tool.
Musicfy has a web app and is functional in mobile browsers, but no dedicated Android app.
Boomy and Mubert are similarly web-first.
What to Consider on Android
Native apps vs. web wrappers: Apps with native Android implementations (VibeSing, StarMaker, Smule) tend to perform better than web wrappers. They also integrate better with Android sharing, notifications, and the system UI.
Device performance: Android runs on a much wider range of hardware than iPhone. AI music apps that work fine on a Pixel 8 can be sluggish on a budget phone. The native Android apps are usually better optimized for this range.
Offline capability: None of the AI generation apps work offline — training and generation are cloud-based. Karaoke apps with offline mode are limited to downloaded tracks.
Sharing integration: Native Android apps integrate with the system share sheet, which makes posting to WhatsApp, Telegram, and other Android-first apps smoother. Web wrappers often lose this integration.
The Bottom Line for Android
For AI covers with your own voice, VibeSing works well on Android and the experience is close to iOS.
For karaoke, Android is actually a strong platform — Smule, StarMaker, and WeSing all have mature Android apps, and the community on Android (especially in Asia) is large and active.
For AI music generation, Suno and Udio are essentially web tools. You'll use them on a laptop for serious work, and the Android apps are for casual use.
For professional voice tools, most are desktop-only and don't prioritize Android.
The honest summary: Android is well-supported for the consumer-facing AI music apps, less well-supported for the professional tools. If you mostly want to make AI covers and sing karaoke, you'll find solid options on Android.