The speaker is good. The companion app is the bottleneck
Mini stereo amplifiers and wireless speakers cover a huge slice of home audio in 2026, and almost every one of them ships with a companion app for setup, EQ, and firmware. Most of those apps are mediocre. The default speaker app from the manufacturer is usually built once and shipped as-is, and the controls users want most, like reliable Bluetooth pairing, custom EQ, and multi-room grouping, often live behind a clunky setup wizard.
The good news is that a few apps have stayed sharp. We tested seven Bluetooth speaker control apps for Android across multi-room systems, single portable speakers, and the system-wide audio tools that work with whatever speaker you have. The picks below cover the main brand apps worth installing and the third-party tools that fix gaps the brand apps leave open.
What to look for in a speaker control app
The picks below share a few things.
- Reliable Bluetooth pairing. The app should remember speakers and reconnect without a fight.
- A real EQ. A 5-band parametric is the floor. Some apps ship with one band and call it tone control.
- Multi-room support if your speakers do it. Sonos and Soundcore both group speakers across rooms cleanly.
- Firmware updates that actually run. Speakers without recent firmware miss codecs and battery improvements.
- Independent left and right balance for stereo pairs. Most apps still hide this two menus deep.
- Battery health visibility on portable speakers.
- Light branding. A control app should not push the brand’s commerce store every time you open it.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Free | Multi-room | EQ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sonos | Best multi-room | Yes | Yes, full | Bass and treble plus EQ |
| Bose Music | Bose home and portable | Yes | Yes, Bose-only | Light EQ |
| Sony Music Center | Sony speaker management | Yes | Yes, Sony-only | Sound modes plus EQ |
| Soundcore | Anker Soundcore portables | Yes | Yes, partyCast | 8-band EQ |
| JBL Portable | JBL portable speakers | Yes | Yes, PartyBoost | 3-band EQ |
| Bluetooth Volume Manager | Universal volume per device | Yes | No | None |
| Wavelet | System-wide EQ for any output | Yes | No | Auto-EQ + 9-band parametric |
1. Sonos, best for multi-room
Sonos is still the cleanest multi-room speaker app. Add a speaker, name it after a room, and group it with any other Sonos speaker for synchronised playback. The streaming service integration covers Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal, Amazon Music, Deezer, Plex, and most local networks, which means the app doubles as a universal controller for the whole household.
The 2024 redesign was rocky on launch. The 2025 patches restored most of the missing features, and by 2026 the app is back to the standard the brand built its reputation on.
Where it falls short: Sonos hardware only. Some advanced settings still hide a level or two deeper than they should.
Pricing: Free with the speaker hardware.
Platforms: Android, iOS, Mac, Windows, web.
Bottom line: Pick Sonos if you have a Sonos system and you want the cleanest multi-room control on the platform.
2. Bose Music, best for Bose home and portable
Bose Music consolidated the older SoundTouch and Bose Connect apps into one control surface for the whole Bose lineup. Pairing is reliable, EQ controls cover bass, treble, and a handful of presets, and multi-room grouping works across compatible Bose speakers and soundbars.
The app handles SoundLink portable speakers, Smart Soundbar series, headphones, and the SoundLink Home in the same setup flow.
Where it falls short: Light EQ compared to Soundcore. The home-screen layout has too much promotional content for a speaker app.
Pricing: Free with Bose hardware.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Pick Bose Music if you own Bose speakers and want one app for portable, home, and headphone control.
3. Sony Music Center, best for Sony speakers
Sony Music Center is the universal app for the Sony speaker lineup, including the SRS-XB portable line, the HT soundbars, and the multi-room SongPal-era hardware. The pairing flow is reliable, the firmware update path is fast, and the EQ supports the Sony ClearAudio+ presets alongside a manual setup.
The same app also handles Sony AV receivers, which is convenient if you have a mixed Sony setup.
Where it falls short: Sony hardware only. The interface mixes a lot of products into the same screen.
Pricing: Free with Sony hardware.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Pick Sony Music Center if you have Sony speakers, soundbars, or receivers and you want them in one app.
4. Soundcore, best for Anker Soundcore portables
Soundcore is the strongest brand-specific app on the list. The 8-band EQ goes deeper than most competitors, the PartyCast feature pairs up to 100 compatible Soundcore speakers for multi-speaker playback, and the firmware updates run fast. The app also handles Soundcore headphones and earbuds.
It is the rare brand app that feels like the developers actually want power users to tune the sound.
Where it falls short: Soundcore hardware only. Multi-speaker grouping only works with PartyCast-compatible models.
Pricing: Free with hardware.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Pick Soundcore if you own an Anker portable and you want a real EQ and PartyCast grouping.
5. JBL Portable, best for JBL portable speakers
JBL Portable is the official app for JBL Bluetooth speakers in the Charge, Flip, Pulse, Boombox, and Xtreme lines. The PartyBoost feature pairs compatible JBL speakers in stereo, the 3-band EQ tunes the sound to the room, and the firmware updates handle codec improvements as they ship.
The app is smaller than the Bose and Sony equivalents because the speakers are simpler. That works in the app’s favour because the controls are easier to find.
Where it falls short: Limited EQ flexibility. Older JBL models drop out of support faster than they should.
Pricing: Free with JBL hardware.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Pick JBL Portable if you own a Charge, Flip, Pulse, or Boombox and you want PartyBoost stereo plus EQ.
6. Bluetooth Volume Manager, universal volume per device
Bluetooth Volume Manager is a third-party utility that fixes one of Android’s longest-running annoyances. The system remembers a single Bluetooth media volume across every speaker. This app stores the right volume per paired device and applies it on connection, so connecting to a quiet bookshelf speaker does not blast you out of the seat.
It also supports per-device volume curves, which helps when one speaker reads loud at low percentages.
Where it falls short: No EQ. Does not group speakers. The free tier covers most needs.
Pricing: Free with optional premium for advanced features.
Platforms: Android.
Bottom line: Pick Bluetooth Volume Manager if your phone forgets per-device volume and you want it remembered automatically.
7. Wavelet, system-wide EQ for any output
Wavelet is the EQ users wish their phone shipped with. The 9-band parametric EQ runs at the system level, AutoEq presets cover hundreds of headphones and speakers, and the bass tuning is sharper than any brand app’s tone controls.
It is the right pick for users with a generic Bluetooth speaker that ships with a useless companion app, since Wavelet runs system-wide regardless of brand.
Where it falls short: Some advanced features need an in-app purchase. Effects can clash with brand apps that also apply EQ.
Pricing: Free with optional in-app upgrade for additional features.
Platforms: Android.
Bottom line: Pick Wavelet if your speaker’s official app cannot tune the sound and you want a system-wide EQ that works on any output.
How to pick the right one
- If you have a Sonos system: Sonos, no question.
- If you own Bose speakers: Bose Music.
- If you have Sony speakers, soundbars, or receivers: Sony Music Center.
- If you have an Anker Soundcore portable: Soundcore.
- If you have a JBL portable: JBL Portable.
- If your phone forgets the right volume per device: Bluetooth Volume Manager.
- If your speaker’s app cannot tune sound: Wavelet for system-wide EQ.
FAQ
Why does my Android phone use the same volume across every Bluetooth speaker? That is Android’s default. Bluetooth Volume Manager fixes it by remembering per-device volume.
Can I use one app to control speakers from different brands? No. Sonos, Bose, Sony, JBL, and Soundcore each require their own app for hardware-specific controls. Wavelet is the closest thing to a universal tool because it tunes audio at the system level regardless of brand.
Do these apps work with mini stereo amplifiers? Mini amplifiers without their own app rely on Bluetooth pairing and system audio. Wavelet and Bluetooth Volume Manager are the most useful tools for those setups.
Which app has the best EQ? Soundcore for an in-brand EQ, Wavelet for a system-wide EQ. Sonos, Bose, and Sony each ship with lighter EQ.
Are these apps safe to install? All of the brand apps come from the speaker manufacturers and are verified on Google Play and Aptoide where listed. Wavelet and Bluetooth Volume Manager are widely used third-party tools with long track records.