Tune My Music requires you to log into your music streaming accounts (Spotify, Apple Music, etc.). A malicious APK can intercept these OAuth tokens and give hackers full access to your playlists, listening history, and even linked payment methods.

An APK (Android Package Kit) is the file format Android uses to distribute and install apps. A "Premium APK" or "Mod APK" is a hacked version of the original app that attempts to unlock paid features for free.

Why is the search volume for "Tune My Music Premium APK" rising?

If you just need to move a playlist once from Spotify to YouTube Music, you do not need any APK or payment. Here is the safe, legal method:

Pro tip: For the mobile app experience, simply add the Tune My Music website to your phone’s home screen. It works like an app without any APK risk.

Tune My Music is a popular cross-platform playlist transfer service. Its primary function is to allow users to move playlists and favorite tracks between different music streaming services (e.g., Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, YouTube Music, Tidal, Deezer, etc.).

For example, if you decide to switch from Spotify to Apple Music, Tune My Music saves you hours of manually re-adding songs by automatically migrating your entire library.

The official Tune My Music app is free for basic transfers but has limitations. A so-called "Tune My Music Premium APK" is an unofficial, modified Android application package that claims to unlock premium features without payment. These typically include:

To understand why people search for a "Premium APK," you need to know the limitations of the free tier.

Free Version (Web & App):

Premium Version (Paid Subscription):

A monthly subscription typically costs around $5.50–$7.00, while a yearly plan is roughly $24–$30. This is objectively cheap compared to manually rebuilding a 2,000-song playlist.

Here is the critical technical detail that most "APK download" guides ignore.

Tune My Music is not a standalone player. It is a cloud-based connector. When you transfer a playlist, the work happens on Tune My Music’s servers, not on your phone. The app is essentially a remote control for their cloud infrastructure.

When you upgrade to Premium, your account (stored on their servers) gets a flag that says "unlimited access." If you install a modded APK that tries to fake this flag locally, the server will still recognize your free-tier status. You cannot hack a server-side limitation with a client-side mod.

At best, a modified APK might change the visual interface—removing the "Upgrade" button—but when you attempt to transfer 1,000 songs, the server will reject the request or stop after 500 tracks.

For those who want the legitimate mobile experience, here is the correct way to use Tune My Music on Android: