Best Free Podcast Apps in 2026

Best free podcast apps for iPhone and Android in 2026

Best free podcast apps in 2026

You don't need to pay a subscription to get a great podcast app. Several of the best players on iPhone and Android are completely free, and others offer enough in their free tier that you may never need to upgrade. Here's what's worth downloading.

TL;DR

  • Best free on iPhone: Apple Podcasts (built-in, solid queue management, syncs across Apple devices)
  • Best free on Android: AntennaPod (open source, no ads, no tracking)
  • Best cross-platform free tier: Pocket Casts (free with optional Plus upgrade)
  • Best for power users: Podcast Addict on Android (free with ads, absurdly customizable)

Apple Podcasts

  • Platform: iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch
  • Cost: Completely free
  • Standout features: Automatic downloads, cross-device sync via iCloud, Up Next queue, channels and subscriptions marketplace

Apple Podcasts comes pre-installed on every iPhone, which makes it the default choice for most iOS users. It handles the basics well: subscribing, downloading, queuing, and playing. The "Up Next" queue lets you arrange episodes in order, and automatic downloads ensure fresh episodes are ready for your commute.

The app has improved significantly since its redesign. Search is decent, library organization works, and the Subscriptions marketplace lets you purchase ad-free versions of select shows. Where it falls short: no cross-platform support (Android users are out), and power-user features like variable silence trimming aren't available.

For most iPhone users who just want something that works, Apple Podcasts is perfectly fine.

AntennaPod

  • Platform: Android
  • Cost: Completely free, open source
  • Standout features: No ads, no tracking, OPML import/export, variable speed, sleep timer

AntennaPod is the privacy-conscious listener's pick. It's fully open source, collects no data, and runs no ads. The interface is clean and functional, if not flashy.

It supports everything you'd expect: automatic downloads, streaming, variable speed, chapter support, and a sleep timer. You can import your subscriptions from another app via OPML, and the search pulls from multiple podcast directories.

The trade-off is polish. AntennaPod doesn't have the visual refinement of commercial apps, and there's no iOS version. But if you're on Android and value privacy, it's hard to beat free-with-no-strings-attached.

Pocket Casts

  • Platform: iPhone, Android, web
  • Cost: Free tier (limited), Plus at $3.99/month
  • Standout features: Cross-platform sync, filters, Up Next queue, trim silence, volume boost

Pocket Casts went free-to-download in 2023 after years as a paid app. The free tier gives you a capable podcast player with subscription management, a playback queue, and basic customization. The Plus tier adds desktop apps, cloud storage, custom themes, and folders.

The free version's limitation is the lack of cross-device sync and some playback features. But as a standalone mobile app, the free tier holds up well against most competitors.

If you switch between iPhone and Android (or want a web player for your desktop), Pocket Casts' cross-platform approach makes it stand out.

Podcast Addict (Android)

  • Platform: Android
  • Cost: Free with ads, $6.99 one-time to remove ads
  • Standout features: Custom playlists, filters, stats, audio effects, RSS support, OPML

Podcast Addict is the Swiss Army knife of Android podcast apps. It supports podcasts, audiobooks, RSS feeds, YouTube channels, and Twitch streams all in one app. The customization options are staggering: you can set per-podcast download rules, create filtered playlists, apply audio effects, and track listening statistics.

The free version includes ads in the app's UI (not in your podcast audio). A $6.99 one-time purchase removes them. The interface can feel overwhelming at first, but once you set up your preferences, it stays out of your way.

If you want maximum control over your listening experience on Android, Podcast Addict earns its 10 million+ downloads. It's one of those apps where the depth of features keeps revealing itself the more you use it.

Spotify

  • Platform: iPhone, Android, web, desktop
  • Cost: Free (with music ads), Premium at $11.99/month
  • Standout features: Music + podcasts in one app, algorithmic recommendations, video podcasts, social sharing

Spotify is where many people first encounter podcasts, since it's already on their phone for music. The app handles podcast basics well: search, subscribe, download, and play. Recommendations surface new shows based on your listening habits.

The limitations: Spotify's free tier plays audio ads between music tracks (and some podcast ads remain even with Premium). The app also doesn't support RSS feeds, so you can't add shows that aren't in Spotify's catalog. Episodes sometimes disappear if licensing changes, which doesn't happen with RSS-based apps.

Spotify works if podcasts are a secondary activity for you. If podcasts are your main thing, a dedicated podcast app gives you more control.

How we chose

We evaluated each app on: cost (truly free or functional free tier), feature depth, ease of use, platform availability, and update frequency. We excluded apps that haven't been updated in over a year or that require payment to access basic playback features.

Every app on this list can handle a typical listener's needs at zero cost. The differences come down to platform preference, privacy priorities, and how much customization you want.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the best podcast app that's completely free?

Apple Podcasts (iPhone) and AntennaPod (Android) are both 100% free with no paid tiers, no ads in the UI, and no feature restrictions. Podcast Addict is free with small UI ads.

Is Spotify good for podcasts?

Spotify works fine for casual listening, but dedicated podcast apps offer more control. Spotify doesn't support RSS feeds, has limited queue management, and still plays some ads even with Premium.

Do free podcast apps have ads?

The apps themselves don't inject ads into your podcast audio. Some free apps (like Podcast Addict) show banner ads in the UI, which you can remove with a one-time purchase. The ads you hear in podcasts come from the podcast creators, not the app.

About Sarah Chen

Tech writer and podcast enthusiast. Sarah has been writing about audio technology and the podcasting industry since 2019.