Music for YouTube Cooking Videos
Choose background music for long-form food content, intros, narration, prep steps, and plating

Cooking background music for YouTube needs to support the full recipe, not fight the voiceover, timer cuts, chopping sounds, or plating shots. A long cooking video often moves through several sections: intro, ingredient prep, cooking steps, tasting, and final dish reveal.
One track may work across the full edit, but some videos need a softer intro track and a warmer main bed under narration. The goal is simple. Pick music that helps the viewer stay with the recipe, while the license gives you clear permission to publish the finished video on YouTube.
Choose music around the full recipe flow
A YouTube cooking video has more space than a short food reel. The music needs to carry the viewer through prep, cooking, waiting time, serving, and final shots.
A 10-minute pasta recipe can use a steady rhythm to support chopping, stirring, and camera movement. A slow Sunday baking video may work better with softer acoustic music under quiet narration. Meal-prep videos often need light pop or relaxed corporate music to keep the edit moving without sounding too dramatic.
The key check is pacing. The intro can use a clearer musical hook. The main cooking section needs a bed that does not distract from instructions. The final reveal can use a warmer or slightly brighter part of the track.
Avoid music that constantly changes mood. A busy track can make a simple recipe feel rushed.
Keep narration clear
Cooking videos often depend on spoken steps. Viewers need to hear measurements, timing, texture cues, and small instructions like “cook until the onions soften” or “rest the dough for ten minutes.”
Background music should sit behind the voice. If the track has loud lead melodies, sharp drums, or sudden breaks, it can cover the words. A cleaner instrumental track is usually easier to mix.
Before publishing, play the video on laptop speakers and phone speakers. If the recipe steps feel hard to follow, lower the music or choose a simpler track.
This is especially useful for creators who publish weekly recipes. A consistent music style can make the channel feel familiar, but each track still needs to fit the pace of the video.
Check YouTube use before you upload
YouTube says creators can safely use music by getting permission, using music under the correct license terms, or sourcing music through YouTube’s own music options. YouTube also explains that Content ID claims can let copyright owners monetize, track, or block claimed videos.
For a cooking channel, this means the music source needs to be clear. A song found on social media, inside an editing app, or in another creator’s video is not proof that you can use it in your own YouTube upload.
Use music where the permission is tied to your finished video. Keep the proof with your project folder. Save the track name, license terms, receipt, and upload notes. This helps if you need to confirm the source later.
Best fit for YouTube cooking creators
Royalty-free music is a good fit when you want a track you can use in finished cooking videos without adding another monthly platform to your workflow.
Audiodrome works best for creators, freelancers, food bloggers, and small production teams who publish full recipe videos, cooking tutorials, meal-prep episodes, and kitchen walkthroughs. You can choose a track, license it once, place it inside the video, and keep the license proof with the edit.
Our picks for YouTube cooking videos

