Royalty-Free Music for Tech Explainer Videos

Choose tracks with space for voiceover, clean rhythm, and clear commercial licensing

Video editor choosing music for a tech explainer video with product screens and audio tracks on the timeline

A tech explainer video needs music that supports the explanation instead of fighting it.

The voiceover carries the message. The visuals show the product, workflow, or idea. The music should add pace, clarity, and a polished feel while leaving room for speech, captions, UI sounds, and motion graphics.

Pro Tip Icon

Quick answer

For a tech explainer video, choose royalty-free music with a clean rhythm, light momentum, and enough space for voiceover. Avoid tracks with busy vocals, sharp lead melodies, or dramatic drops that pull attention away from the explanation.

For business or client work, use music licensed for commercial use, client delivery, and platform publishing. Keep the track details, receipt, and license terms with the project files.

Choose music that leaves room for the explanation

Tech explainer videos often combine voiceover, UI clips, animated diagrams, screenshots, icons, and short text callouts. Music should make those elements feel connected.

A good track usually has steady movement, a clean beat, and a controlled arrangement. Soft electronic, light corporate, minimal ambient, and modern pop-influenced instrumentals can work well when the track stays under the voice.

Avoid tracks that sound too cinematic for a simple product explanation. A big trailer-style build can make a pricing feature, onboarding step, or workflow diagram feel inflated.

Also avoid tracks with lead lines that compete with speech. A bright synth hook may sound good alone, but it can distract from a founder explaining a platform feature or a narrator walking through a technical process.

The best choice gives the edit a pulse and lets the viewer focus on the idea.

Match the track to the explainer’s job

A tech explainer video can do several jobs. The right track depends on the job the video has to finish.

For a website hero explainer, choose music that starts quickly and feels clear in the first few seconds. Viewers may only watch long enough to decide if the product looks relevant.

Clear Intro
Clear Intro
Loading…
Open Download Buy
Quick Start
Quick Start
Loading…
Open Download Buy
Smooth Begin
Smooth Begin
Loading…
Open Download Buy
Clear Intro
Clear Intro
Chill Pop, Ambient Pop, Corporate · Midtempo
Quick Start
Quick Start
Pop, Indie Pop, Dance, House, Corporate · Uptempo
Smooth Begin
Smooth Begin
Deep House, Chillout, Cinematic, Electronica, House, Techno · Midtempo

For a support or onboarding explainer, keep the music lower and simpler. The viewer needs to follow steps, labels, settings, and screen changes.

Clear Vision
Clear Vision
Loading…
Open Download Buy
Gentle Motion
Gentle Motion
Loading…
Open Download Buy
Solid Steps
Solid Steps
Loading…
Open Download Buy
Clear Vision
Clear Vision
Electro Pop, Corporate, Ambient, Chillout, Electronica, House · Downtempo
Gentle Motion
Gentle Motion
Ambient, Electronic, Acoustic, Cinematic · Downtempo
Solid Steps
Solid Steps
Chill Pop, Acoustic Pop, Ambient, Corporate, Lo-fi · Midtempo

For a sales or investor explainer, use music with more confidence and forward movement, but keep the arrangement controlled. The music should support the business case without making the video feel like a launch trailer.

Dynamic Flow
Dynamic Flow
Loading…
Open Download Buy
Confident Drive
Confident Drive
Loading…
Open Download Buy
Steady Build
Steady Build
Loading…
Open Download Buy
Dynamic Flow
Dynamic Flow
Indie Electronic, Corporate Pop, Corporate Inspirational, Uplifting Pop, Light Indie Rock · Midtempo
Confident Drive
Confident Drive
House, Deep House, Ambient, Ambient Pop, Cinematic, Pop · Midtempo
Steady Build
Steady Build
Dance, House, Ambient House, Electronic · Uptempo

Check the license before you publish

For tech explainer videos, the key rights are permission to use the music inside the finished video, commercial use, client use, monetized publishing, and platform publishing.

Audiodrome’s license allows buyers to use licensed tracks inside personal and commercial projects, including video, social content, online video, advertising, and monetized online publishing, as long as the music stays embedded in the finished project.

Audiodrome license terms showing permitted commercial and non-commercial video use
Audiodrome License Agreement

Client work is also covered when the finished project is delivered to the client and the raw music file or stems are not handed over as a reusable asset.

Audiodrome license terms explaining client projects and embedded music requirements
Audiodrome License Agreement

Keep the music file separate in your edit archive, but deliver only the finished video to the client. Save the license, receipt, track name, and project name in the same folder before the first upload.

A platform can still apply its own publishing or monetization rules, so check the upload destination when the explainer will run as an ad, sponsored post, or monetized video.

Best fit: clean royalty-free music with commercial rights

The safest practical choice for a tech explainer video is a royalty-free instrumental track with commercial-use rights and a clear project license.

That creates a cleaner publishing path for your team or client. It also lowers the chance that a track works in the edit but creates problems when the video reaches its final use.

Audiodrome offers creators, marketers, freelancers, and businesses a curated royalty-free music library with one-time payment and lifetime access. The product context should stay practical: Audiodrome is built for people who want professional music, clear licensing, and fewer recurring costs.

Use Audiodrome when you need music for a product education video, software explainer, animated workflow, client explainer, YouTube product overview, or business landing page.


Explore related use cases