Apple Music Offline: How to Download Songs and Listen Without Internet Download music in Apple Music and keep your library accessible anywhere — flights, travel, low-signal areas, or when reducing data usage.

A woman with braided hair wearing large gray headphones and a pleated blue top has her eyes closed, appearing to enjoy the music, against a plain blue background.
Image Credit: Apple Inc.

Streaming makes music instantly accessible, but it also makes it dependent on signal strength, roaming plans, and data caps. The moment you board a flight, enter a subway tunnel, travel internationally, or drive through rural areas, that convenience disappears. Apple Music offline downloads remove that dependency. When music is stored directly on your device, playback continues regardless of connectivity.

Offline listening is not a separate mode you switch on. It is a result of downloading content to your device while your Apple Music subscription remains active. Once downloaded, songs, albums, and playlists live locally and play without buffering or interruption.

For travelers, commuters, athletes, students, and professionals who rely on music throughout the day, offline access changes how the service functions.

Downloading Songs and Playlists on iPhone or iPad

Before downloading, content must be added to your Library.

Music > Find Album or Playlist > Add to Library

After adding it, download it for offline use:

Music > Library > Select Album or Playlist > Download

A downward arrow icon confirms that the content is saved locally. Once downloaded, you can enable Airplane Mode and playback will continue without interruption.

To download individual tracks:

Music > Library > Tap the three-dot menu next to a song > Download

Downloaded content appears automatically inside your Library.

If you want to see only locally stored files:

Music > Library > Downloaded

This filtered view ensures you are accessing music that does not require internet access.

A smartphone screen displays a music app in dark mode with menu options for Playlists, Artists, Albums, and Songs. The blurred orange-purple background sets the tone, while an Apple logo hints at Apple Music offline access in the bottom right corner.
Image Credit: AppleMagazine

Downloading Music on Mac

Offline playback also works on Mac through the Music app.

Music (Mac) > Find Album or Playlist > Add to Library

Music > Library > Download

Downloaded files remain accessible even if the Mac disconnects from Wi-Fi temporarily.

Managing Storage Strategically

Downloaded music consumes device storage. The amount depends on audio quality and library size. For users storing hundreds or thousands of songs, storage management becomes important.

To review downloaded content:

Settings > Music > Downloaded Music

Here you can delete specific artists, albums, or all downloaded content if necessary.

If you want music added to your Library to download automatically:

Settings > Music > Automatic Downloads

This setting ensures that every new addition is stored offline immediately.

For users concerned about storage limits:

Settings > Music > Optimize Storage

Enable this to allow iOS to remove rarely played downloads automatically when storage runs low. The songs remain in your Library and can be re-downloaded later.

A smartphone screen displays the "Optimize Storage" setting for Apple Music offline, with the toggle switch turned off. The description explains that enabling this will remove unplayed music if the device is low on storage.

Audio Quality and Offline Strategy

Audio quality directly affects storage usage. Standard AAC files require less space. Lossless and high-resolution lossless files require significantly more.

To adjust download quality:

Settings > Music > Audio Quality > Download in Lossless

Lossless downloads provide higher fidelity but increase file size. For devices with limited storage, standard quality may be more practical.

Professionals using wired headphones or high-end audio systems may prefer lossless downloads for accuracy. Casual listening during travel may not justify the additional storage.

Reducing Cellular Data Usage

Offline listening also helps control data consumption.

To manage streaming over mobile networks:

Settings > Music > Cellular Data

You can disable cellular streaming entirely or restrict high-quality audio when not connected to Wi-Fi.

For international travel, downloading playlists in advance avoids roaming charges.

Offline Listening in Real-World Scenarios

Frequent flyers download playlists before boarding. Long train commuters store daily mixes to avoid signal interruptions in tunnels. Students download lecture background playlists for campus areas with unstable coverage. Athletes preload workout playlists to prevent connection drops during outdoor runs.

In each case, the process is simple: add, download, verify.

Before leaving connectivity behind, confirm the download icon appears next to the content.

Then test by enabling Airplane Mode and opening:

Music > Library > Downloaded

If playback works, the music is stored locally.

Two smartphones display Apple Podcasts and Apple Music apps. The left screen shows a podcast episode playing, while the right highlights the Apple Music and Top Shows sections, where a simple switch tracks gesture lets you easily browse your favorites.

Subscription Dependency

Offline playback requires an active Apple Music subscription. If the subscription lapses, downloaded tracks remain on the device but become unplayable. The files are encrypted and tied to your account status.

This protects licensing agreements while still giving subscribers flexibility to listen offline.

Seamless Sync Across Devices

If iCloud Music Library is enabled, your library stays consistent across iPhone, iPad, and Mac. However, downloads remain device-specific. Downloading on iPhone does not automatically download the same album on Mac unless Automatic Downloads is enabled there as well.

Each device manages its own storage and offline files.

Apple Music offline listening transforms the service from streaming-only to hybrid access. Whether reducing data usage, preparing for travel, or ensuring uninterrupted playback in low-signal environments, downloading content ensures your music remains available exactly when needed.

Jack
About the Author

Jack is a journalist at AppleMagazine, covering technology, digital culture, and the fast changing relationship between people and platforms. With a background in digital media, his work focuses on how emerging technologies shape everyday life, from AI and streaming to social media and consumer tech.