In-App Music

Audiodrome is a royalty-free music platform designed specifically for content creators who need affordable, high-quality background music for videos, podcasts, social media, and commercial projects. Unlike subscription-only services, Audiodrome offers both free tracks and simple one-time licensing with full commercial rights, including DMCA-safe use on YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok. All music is original, professionally produced, and PRO-free, ensuring zero copyright claims. It’s ideal for YouTubers, freelancers, marketers, and anyone looking for budget-friendly audio that’s safe to monetize.

In-app music is music made available inside a platform’s own creation tools, such as Instagram Reels, Stories, or YouTube Shorts, so users can add tracks without sourcing music elsewhere. The main issue is that access to in-app music does not automatically give you broad reuse rights outside that platform, outside that feature, or for every type of commercial use.

Quick facts:
Also called: platform music library, built-in audio library, native music library, platform audio tools
Applies to: Reels, Stories, Shorts, TikTok posts, and similar platform-native creation features
Used for: faster editing, easier soundtrack selection, and lower-friction publishing inside the platform
Not the same as: a full sync license, a cross-platform license, or automatic permission to reuse the same track in ads, websites, podcasts, or client deliverables.

Example:
A creator adds a song from Instagram’s built-in music options to a Reel. That is in-app music use, but it does not mean the same track is cleared for a YouTube upload, a paid ad, a podcast intro, or a client website unless separate rights expressly cover those uses.

Gotchas:

  • A track being available inside a platform does not mean it is cleared everywhere. Platform music access is usually tied to that specific ecosystem or feature.
  • Commercial use rules can differ from personal or creator use. TikTok says business users should use music from its Commercial Music Library because licenses outside that library do not cover commercial use in content.
  • Business account access may be narrower than personal account access. TikTok states that Business Accounts do not get access to its general music library because those songs are restricted to personal entertainment use.
  • “Royalty free” inside a platform still needs context. Meta’s Sound Collection page says the library is safe to use in Reels and Instagram Stories

FAQs

No. In-app music usually refers to music you can use inside a platform’s own tools. That is different from having a separate license that follows the content across platforms or use cases.

Not always. TikTok explicitly says commercial users should rely on its Commercial Music Library for promotional content, because music outside that library is not cleared for commercial use in content.

No. Cross-platform reuse rights for websites, ads, or other external publishing is not granted.

No. YouTube Shorts audio library is populated through Shorts-specific licensing agreements. That means the permission is tied to the Shorts environment, not automatically to every other format or destination.

Check account type, platform rules, commercial-use restrictions, whether the music is limited to one feature, and whether you need a separate license for paid ads, client work, websites, or reposting elsewhere.


Related terms

Platform Music Library • Commercial Music Library • Cross-Platform LicenseSync LicenseBusiness AccountCreator AccountRights-Cleared Audio

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