
dHits (dヒッツ) is one of the cheapest music subscriptions in Japan at 690 yen per month, and it bundles cleanly with NTT Docomo billing. The catch is that on-demand listening is mostly limited to the 10-song monthly my Hits quota; the rest is playlist playback. For listeners who want real on-demand control, lossless audio, or a deeper Western catalog, these are the dHits alternatives worth trying in 2026.
Why people leave dHits
- Full-song on-demand play is gated behind the 10-song monthly my Hits slot. Other listening happens through curated playlists.
- The cheaper dHits (300) plan at 330 yen drops my Hits and music video viewing entirely.
- Catalog is competitive for J-pop but thinner than Spotify or Apple Music on Western and Latin repertoire.
- App design feels older than rivals and the recommendation feed is less responsive.
- Service is Japan-only. Travelers cannot use dHits abroad.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Free tier | Paid from | Standout |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spotify | Catalog breadth | Yes, ad-supported | 980 yen/mo | Discovery and Connect |
| Apple Music | iPhone owners | Trial only | 1,080 yen/mo | Lossless and Atmos included |
| YouTube Music | Videos and rarities | Yes, ad-supported | 1,080 yen/mo | YouTube catalog |
| Amazon Music | Prime subscribers | Limited via Prime | 880 yen/mo (Prime) | Bundled with Prime |
| LINE MUSIC | LINE users and karaoke | Previews only | 1,080 yen/mo | Lyrics karaoke and LINE ringtones |
| Rakuten Music | Rakuten Points | Bundle hours free | 780 yen/mo | Earn and spend Rakuten Points |
| KKBOX | Asian repertoire | Trial only | 980 yen/mo | J-pop, Mandopop depth |
The alternatives
1. Spotify -- best for catalog and discovery
Spotify covers J-pop comparably to dHits and adds the broadest Western catalog of any service available in Japan. The free tier streams full tracks with ads, which is the largest single upgrade over dHits’ preview-only free experience. Premium is 980 yen per month, below dHits standard plus video at higher tiers.
Where it falls short: no lossless audio, and Japanese paid plans do not bundle with carriers the way dHits does with Docomo.
Pricing: Free with ads, 980 yen/mo Premium, 1,580 yen/mo Family, 480 yen/mo Student, 1,280 yen/mo Duo.
Migrating from dHits: Soundiiz exports dHits favorites and rebuilds them as Spotify playlists. Most J-pop tracks match cleanly; indie singles may need manual lookup.
Bottom line: Pick Spotify if you want full on-demand catalog access and a usable free tier, even if you lose Docomo billing convenience.
2. Apple Music -- best for iPhone owners and lossless
Apple Music includes Lossless ALAC and Dolby Atmos at no extra cost in its 1,080 yen plan. Japanese catalog matches Spotify and dHits for major-label releases, and Apple frequently lands timed exclusives with Japanese labels. The Apple One bundle starts at 1,200 yen for music, iCloud+, and Arcade.
Where it falls short: no permanent free tier, and the Android app trails the iPhone version on a few features.
Pricing: 1,080 yen/mo Individual, 1,680 yen/mo Family, 580 yen/mo Student, 320 yen/mo Voice plan.
Migrating from dHits: Soundiiz or FreeYourMusic bridge the move. Apple Music’s catalog match is strong on J-pop, particularly recent releases.
Bottom line: Pick Apple Music if you own iPhones and AirPods and want lossless audio bundled in at the same price as dHits.
3. YouTube Music -- best for video and rarities
YouTube Music indexes the full YouTube video catalog alongside its audio library, which captures Japanese live recordings, fan covers, and bootlegs that dHits and the other paid services do not host. Premium combines neatly with YouTube Premium at 1,680 yen for both.
Where it falls short: no lossless audio, top quality 256 kbps AAC, and mobile background play requires Premium.
Pricing: Free with ads, 1,080 yen/mo Premium, 1,680 yen/mo Family, 580 yen/mo Student.
Migrating from dHits: Soundiiz or TuneMyMusic transfers favorites. YouTube’s match engine is generous for Japanese major-label tracks because both audio and video versions count.
Bottom line: Pick YouTube Music when video catalog matters or you already pay for YouTube Premium.
4. Amazon Music -- best for Prime subscribers
If you already pay for Amazon Prime in Japan, Amazon Music Prime is included at no extra charge and now supports on-demand play for tens of millions of tracks. Stepping up to Music Unlimited at 880 yen for Prime members or 1,080 yen standalone adds full catalog, lossless HD, and Dolby Atmos.
Where it falls short: the app’s library editing tools are clunky, and the recommendation engine is less responsive than Spotify or Apple Music.
Pricing: Bundled with Prime at 5,900 yen/yr, 880 yen/mo Unlimited for Prime members, 1,080 yen/mo standalone, 1,680 yen/mo Family.
Migrating from dHits: Soundiiz supports Amazon Music. Match rates are strong across major J-pop labels.
Bottom line: Pick Amazon Music if you have Prime, especially if you use Echo speakers and want lossless audio at home.
5. LINE MUSIC -- best for karaoke and LINE integration
LINE MUSIC is the closest direct rival to dHits among Japan-focused subscriptions. Its signature lyric karaoke mode and the ability to set songs as LINE ringtones and profile background music are features no global service replicates. Catalog overlaps heavily with dHits for J-pop.
Where it falls short: the free tier only offers 30-second previews, and the per-month rate is a touch above dHits standard.
Pricing: Previews free, 1,080 yen/mo standard, 1,680 yen/mo Family, 580 yen/mo Student.
Migrating from dHits: Soundiiz and TuneMyMusic both bridge between LINE MUSIC and dHits. J-pop catalog overlap means transfer success rate is high.
Bottom line: Pick LINE MUSIC if you live inside the LINE messenger ecosystem and want karaoke mode plus LINE ringtone integration.
6. Rakuten Music -- best for Rakuten Points
Rakuten Music’s bundle plan gives Rakuten Mobile and Diamond/Platinum/Gold members up to 10 free hours every 30 days, and the standalone tier at 780 yen for Card/Mobile members undercuts dHits. The catalog covers J-pop comparably and you earn Rakuten Points just by listening.
Where it falls short: outside the Rakuten ecosystem, the rates do not stand out, and the recommendation engine trails Spotify or Apple Music.
Pricing: Bundle free for eligible members, 780 yen/mo Card/Mobile members, 980 yen/mo standard, 1,080 yen/mo in-app, 480 yen/mo Student.
Migrating from dHits: Soundiiz handles the transfer. Both services share heavy J-pop overlap, so match rates are strong.
Bottom line: Pick Rakuten Music if Rakuten Points and Mobile are already part of your monthly spend.
7. KKBOX -- best for Mandopop alongside J-pop
KKBOX combines a strong J-pop catalog with the deepest Mandopop, Cantopop, and Taiwanese indie selection of any service available in Japan. If your listening overlaps East Asian music more broadly, KKBOX provides a richer regional library than dHits.
Where it falls short: Western catalog is thinner, and there is no lossless option on the standard tier. The app’s UI feels dated next to Spotify or Apple Music.
Pricing: 30-day free trial, 980 yen/mo Premium, 1,480 yen/mo Family, 480 yen/mo Student.
Migrating from dHits: Soundiiz supports KKBOX. J-pop match rate is strong. Mandopop tracks may require manual lookup if they were not previously on dHits.
Bottom line: Pick KKBOX if Mandopop and Cantopop matter to you alongside J-pop, and you want a regional service that knows that catalog.
How to choose
- Pick Spotify if you want the broadest catalog and a real free tier.
- Pick Apple Music if you live in the Apple ecosystem and want lossless audio bundled in.
- Pick YouTube Music if you also subscribe to YouTube Premium or care about live recordings and rarities.
- Pick Amazon Music if you already pay for Prime.
- Pick LINE MUSIC if LINE messenger and karaoke mode matter more than recommendation depth.
- Pick Rakuten Music if Rakuten Points and Rakuten Mobile are part of your spending.
- Pick KKBOX if Mandopop and Cantopop sit alongside J-pop in your listening.
- Stay on dHits if you only listen casually, value the Docomo billing, and the playlist-driven model fits how you discover music. At 690 yen with my Hits, it remains one of the cheapest carrier-bundled options in Japan.
Frequently asked questions
What is the cheapest dHits alternative?
dHits already sits at the low end at 690 yen. Among alternatives, Spotify Student at 480 yen and Apple Music Student at 580 yen are cheaper if you qualify. Rakuten Music’s bundle plan is free for eligible Rakuten members.
Can I keep my dHits playlists when I switch?
Yes. Soundiiz, TuneMyMusic, and FreeYourMusic export dHits playlists and rebuild them on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, LINE MUSIC, and KKBOX. Match rates vary by catalog overlap.
Does any alternative match dHits’ my Hits feature?
No. The my Hits slot is unique to dHits. Most rivals simply offer unlimited on-demand play on their paid tier, which removes the need for a quota.
Is dHits available outside Japan?
No. dHits is Japan-only and requires a Japanese account. Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, and Deezer are the broadest cross-border alternatives.
What is the best dHits alternative for J-pop?
LINE MUSIC and Rakuten Music carry comparable J-pop catalogs. Apple Music and Spotify match dHits on major-label releases. KKBOX adds Mandopop alongside J-pop.