Spotify, a collaborative listening app for Android

Discord music bots used to be the easiest way to share a queue with friends. Rythm got shut down in 2021, Groovy followed within weeks, and Hydra and Jockie Music have spent years dodging YouTube’s takedown waves. The Discord bot era of casual music sharing is mostly over. The good news: a wave of dedicated collaborative listening party apps now do the job better, with synced playback, real chat, and licensed catalogs. We tested seven on Android and ranked them by sync reliability, chat quality, catalog size, and how easy it is to start a session with one tap.

What to look for in a collaborative listening app

The Discord-bot replacement category splits into three job types: synced playback rooms, queue-based collaborative playlists, and watch-along style sessions. The factors that matter:

Quick comparison

AppBest forCatalogFree planStarting priceRating
SpotifyBest overall (Jam)SpotifyYes$11.99/mo (Premium)4.4 (Play Store)
JQBXBest dedicated roomsSpotify Premium requiredYesFree4.6 (Play Store)
StationheadBest radio-style partySpotify or Apple MusicYesFree4.7 (Play Store)
Watch2GetherBest multi-source roomsYouTube + othersYesFree4.4 (Play Store)
DiscordBest with friends already thereSpotify connectYes$9.99/mo (Nitro)4.5 (Play Store)
AmpMeBest speaker-syncing partySpotify, YouTube, filesYes$4.99/mo (Premium)4.4 (Play Store)
Apple MusicBest for SharePlay over FaceTimeApple MusicYes (trial)$10.99/mo4.5 (Play Store)

The 7 best collaborative listening party apps for Android

1. Spotify (Jam), best overall

Spotify introduced Jam as the official Spotify Premium way to listen with up to 32 friends. Anyone in the Jam can add to the queue, vote on the next track, or even take playback control. Sessions work over Bluetooth nearby or remotely with a shareable link. The catalog is the standard Spotify library across over 100 million tracks.

Where it falls short: Hosting requires Spotify Premium. Free Spotify accounts can join Jams but have limited control and quality. No native voice chat layer.

Pricing:

Catalog: Spotify (100M+ tracks)

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Pick Spotify Jam if you and your friends already use Spotify Premium and you want the simplest collaborative queue.


2. JQBX, best for dedicated rooms

JQBX (pronounced “Jukebox”) is a dedicated listening room app that uses Spotify Premium for playback. Rooms are persistent: you can hop into the same room every Wednesday at 8pm and find regulars there. DJs queue tracks, listeners chat, and likes/dislikes track over time. The community has the friendliest culture of any app on this list.

Where it falls short: Spotify Premium is required for every listener. Catalog is locked to what Spotify has.

Pricing:

Catalog: Spotify (Premium required)

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Pick JQBX if you want persistent listening rooms with chat alongside and a community to hang out in.


3. Stationhead, best radio-style party

Stationhead turns Spotify or Apple Music streams into live radio shows. Hosts queue tracks, listeners tune in, and everyone hears the same beat at the same time. Hosts can speak between tracks like a real DJ, and listeners chat live. K-pop fandoms use Stationhead heavily for streaming parties because each listener counts as a real Spotify or Apple Music play.

Where it falls short: Some rooms gate entry by requiring listener subscription to a streaming service. Voice host segments only work for the host, not listener-back-and-forth.

Pricing:

Catalog: Spotify or Apple Music (subscription required)

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Pick Stationhead if you want live radio-style parties with real DJ moments between tracks.


4. Watch2Gether, best multi-source rooms

Watch2Gether is the modern web-based answer to listening parties that can pull from YouTube, Vimeo, SoundCloud, Twitch, Dailymotion, and several other sources. Add anyone with the room link and everyone hears or watches the same thing in sync. The Android app wraps the web experience cleanly. Chat sits alongside the playback.

Where it falls short: Quality of YouTube playback depends on the source video. The interface feels web-app-rather-than-native on Android.

Pricing:

Catalog: YouTube, Vimeo, SoundCloud, Twitch, plus others

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Pick Watch2Gether if you want to share music videos from YouTube and other sources where your friends are not all on Spotify Premium.


5. Discord, best for groups already on Discord

Discord still does music sharing well, just not via the bots that got shut down. Spotify Connect lets you share what you are currently listening to with the channel, and Activities lets server members start synced YouTube watch-along sessions inside voice channels. Watch Together as an Activity covers most of what the music bots used to do, with cleaner sync and fewer copyright takedowns.

Where it falls short: The Spotify Connect integration only shows the host’s current track, not full sync. Music bots that still operate in Discord mostly use unofficial workarounds.

Pricing:

Catalog: Spotify (display only), YouTube via Activities

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Pick Discord Activities if your friend group already runs a server and you want synced YouTube playback as the post-music-bot replacement.


6. AmpMe, best for syncing speakers

AmpMe turns multiple phones into a single speaker array. Connect everyone’s phone to the same room and AmpMe syncs music playback across each device’s speakers, effectively turning a group of phones into a multi-source PA system. Sources include Spotify, YouTube, SoundCloud, and uploaded music files.

Where it falls short: Sync drift can happen on weaker WiFi. Premium adds chat and party features that the free tier limits.

Pricing:

Catalog: Spotify, YouTube, SoundCloud, uploaded files

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Pick AmpMe if you want to turn a group of phones into a synced PA system at a party where one Bluetooth speaker is not enough.


7. Apple Music with SharePlay, best for cross-platform Apple users

Apple Music runs SharePlay over FaceTime, which works on Android since the Apple Music Android app exists. While SharePlay is iOS-only for the FaceTime layer, Apple Music’s Collaborative Playlists feature lets multiple users (including Android subscribers) build playlists together in real time. Sessions work for any subscriber.

Where it falls short: SharePlay full-sync still needs an iPhone host with FaceTime. Pure cross-platform listening parties are limited to collaborative playlists, not synced playback.

Pricing:

Catalog: Apple Music (100M+ tracks)

Download: Google PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Pick Apple Music if you and your friends are mostly on Apple devices and you want the SharePlay native-iOS experience.

How to pick the right collaborative listening app

If you and your friends all have Spotify Premium, pick Spotify Jam first. The integration is officially supported and the catalog is the largest.

If you want a dedicated listening room culture with chat and persistent rooms, pick JQBX.

If you want live DJ-style parties where the host can speak between tracks, pick Stationhead.

If your friends use a mix of services and YouTube is a common denominator, pick Watch2Gether.

If your group already lives in Discord, use Discord Activities for synced YouTube playback.

If you want to turn a group of phones into a synced PA system at a party, AmpMe is the only good option.

If you and your friends are mostly on iPhones, use Apple Music with SharePlay over FaceTime.

FAQ

What replaced Rythm and Groovy on Discord? Discord Activities Watch Together covers synced YouTube playback inside voice channels, which is the closest official replacement. JQBX, Stationhead, and Spotify Jam handle the music-listening side better as standalone apps.

Is Spotify Jam free? Hosting a Jam requires Spotify Premium. Free accounts can join a Jam but with limited features. Anyone hosting needs to be Premium for the experience to work.

Do collaborative listening apps require Spotify or Apple Music? JQBX and Spotify Jam require Spotify Premium for every listener. Stationhead requires either Spotify Premium or Apple Music. Watch2Gether and AmpMe support YouTube and other free sources, so they work without paid subscriptions.

What is the best free listening party app for Android? Watch2Gether is the best fully free pick because it pulls from YouTube and other free sources. AmpMe has a free tier with full sync. Discord Activities Watch Together is free if your group already uses Discord.

Can I host a listening party from my phone? Yes. All seven apps support hosting from Android. JQBX, Spotify Jam, and Stationhead host directly from the phone with one tap. AmpMe needs every device to be in the same WiFi network for best sync.