Royalty-Free Music for Guest Experience Videos
Choose tracks for wellness packages, luxury relaxation stays, social promos, ads, and client hospitality content

Guest experience videos need music that supports the feeling of a stay without turning the edit into a hard sales pitch.
A hotel promo may focus on rooms, views, rates, or brand polish. A guest experience video works closer to the ground. It shows arrival, greetings, small service moments, amenities, food, check-in, room details, guest comments, and the recap of a stay.
The music has to connect those pieces. It should help the viewer feel the pace of the visit, from first impression to final memory.
Choose music that makes the stay feel believable
A guest experience video has a different job from a property promo. It has to make the viewer believe the stay feels good in real life.
That changes the music choice.
The track should not make every scene feel polished in the same way. Arrival, service, amenities, and guest comments each need a slightly different kind of support.
Music for arrival footage
For arrival footage, use music with a clean opening and a calm sense of movement. The first few seconds should make the viewer feel welcomed into the space, not pushed into an ad.
Music for staff moments
For staff moments, choose music that leaves room for small human details. A greeting at the front desk, a server placing coffee, or a concierge helping with luggage works better with warmth and restraint than with a track that sounds too dramatic.
Music for amenity scenes
For amenities, look at how the footage is being used. A rooftop bar, breakfast table, pool, lobby, or fitness room should feel like part of the guest’s day. If the music makes the shots feel like a brochure, the video can lose trust.
Music for guest testimonials
For testimonials, keep the music simple. The guest’s voice needs to carry the proof. A light bed under the voice can hold the edit together, but a busy hook can make the comment feel less natural.
Music for stay recaps
For stay recaps, choose a track with a clear arc. The music should help the editor move from check-in to room details, service, amenities, and final memory without making the video feel like separate clips stitched together.
Match the track to the proof the video needs to show
A guest experience video usually has one main proof point.
A guest experience video usually has one main proof point. It may need to show attentive staff, a property that feels easy to enjoy, or a stay that guests remember after checkout. The music should support that proof point.
A staff-led edit needs personal, grounded music. The viewer should notice the care in the service, not the track.
An amenities-led edit needs steady movement. The music has to connect different spaces without making the video feel rushed.
A testimonial-led edit needs restraint. The guest’s words create trust, so the track should stay underneath the message.
A recap edit can use more build. The track can help the video feel like a complete stay, from arrival to final shot.
Use licensed music before the video goes live
Guest experience videos often sit close to commercial use. A hotel, resort, Airbnb host, agency, tourism brand, or property group may use the video to attract bookings, support ads, or recap a stay for social proof.
That means the music choice needs to be practical, not only creative.
Audiodrome lets you use licensed music inside finished guest experience videos for personal, commercial, business, and client work. You pay once, keep lifetime access, and keep the music embedded in the final video rather than sharing the raw track.
Before publishing, check three things.
First, confirm the track can be used in a commercial or client video. A guest experience edit for a hospitality brand usually needs permission for business content, social posts, web publishing, and ads.
Second, keep the music inside the finished video. Do not send the raw music file as a reusable asset. Deliver the completed video file, project export, or approved cut with the music already synced to the visuals.
Third, save proof. Keep the receipt, track title, license terms, buyer details, and project notes. If a platform, client, or brand partner asks about the music, this gives the team a simple answer.
