Royalty-Free Music for AR App Videos
Choose background music for AR app demos, mobile previews, and real-world app explainer videos

AR app videos need music that supports the demo without pulling attention away from the screen.
A viewer may see a phone camera view, a product overlay, a room scan, a virtual object, or an on-screen UI flow. The music has to give the clip pace, polish, and a clear product feel while leaving space for text, voice-over, taps, and real-world footage.
Choose music that makes the AR action easy to follow
The best music for an AR app video usually has a steady rhythm, clean structure, and enough space for the product moment to land.
AR clips can feel busy fast. A viewer may watch a hand holding a phone, a camera feed, a moving overlay, UI labels, and a product animation at the same time. Dense music can make the video feel crowded.
Use a track that gives the edit a clear pulse.
A steady electronic track can work well for a mobile AR shopping demo. A light tech track can support a furniture placement preview. A clean corporate track can fit an AR training app or business explainer. A more cinematic cue can work for a launch teaser, as long as it leaves room for the app itself.
For short social clips, choose music with a quick opening. The first few seconds should help the viewer understand that the app is doing something visual and interactive.
For longer product explainers, choose a track that can sit under voice-over. Avoid tracks with lead melodies that fight the narration or UI sounds.
Match the track to the AR use case
An AR product overlay video needs a different feel from a game-style AR preview. Choose the track based on what the viewer needs to understand first.
Product overlays and visual previews
For e-commerce, retail, furniture, beauty, or product visualization, use music that feels clean, modern, and controlled.
The track should make the product feel easy to understand. A simple beat, soft synths, light percussion, or warm keys can work well.
Step-by-step AR app demos
For an AR app demo with on-screen instructions, use music that stays in the background.
The viewer needs to follow the steps: scan the surface, place the object, resize it, rotate it, save it, or share it. The music should support that flow without competing with captions, UI sounds, or voice-over.
Mobile AR launch previews
For a mobile AR preview used in a launch campaign, you can choose a track with more movement.
The video may cut between real-world shots, phone screens, feature callouts, and final product results. The music should help those cuts feel connected.
AR explainer videos
For an AR explainer video, keep the track steady and calm.
This gives the voice-over room to explain what the app does and why the viewer should care.
A simple rule works here: the more the viewer needs to learn, the more space the music should leave.
Use licensed music that fits app demos, ads, and client work
AR app videos often move across several places. A team may use the same clip on a website, in a launch post, in a sales deck, in a paid ad, and in a client presentation.
That means the music choice needs to fit the publishing plan.
Audiodrome offers royalty-free music for creators, marketers, freelancers, videographers, YouTubers, and businesses, with one-time payment, lifetime access, and flexible licensing for personal, commercial, and business use.
For this use case, the key point is simple. The music should stay embedded in the finished project.
Audiodrome’s license covers use inside personal, commercial, and client projects, including websites, social platforms, online video, apps, software, games, VR, events, and other listed media. The license also covers applications, software, games, virtual reality, events, exhibits, and installations as permitted uses.
For client work, deliver the finished AR app video, not the raw music file or stems. The license allows client projects when the music stays embedded in the project and no one claims ownership of the music.
Keep the receipt, license terms, track name, and project notes with the final export. That gives your team or client a clear record before the video goes live.
