Royalty-Free Music for Beauty Product Videos
Find tracks for beauty product demos, product ads, launch videos, and clean e-commerce content

A beauty product video has a simple job: make the product look clear, desirable, and easy to understand.
The music needs to support that job. A cleanser demo, lipstick close-up, serum dropper shot, product unboxing, or launch ad can lose focus when the track feels too loud, too busy, or too unrelated to the visuals.
Choose music that matches the product feel
Beauty product videos sell through texture, color, packaging, and finish. The music should support that product feel before it supports the edit.
A glass serum bottle catching light needs space. A moisturizer texture spread across skin needs softness. A makeup compact opening can handle a cleaner pop rhythm. A perfume bottle turning slowly on a reflective surface may need something slower and more refined.
Start by naming the product’s role:
- Clean and minimal: soft electronic tracks, light percussion, gentle keys
- Fresh and everyday: bright pop, relaxed beats, simple melodies
- Premium or luxury: slower tempos, spacious arrangements, subtle builds
- Playful or trend-led: upbeat rhythms, crisp hooks, quick movement
- Calm and skincare-focused: warm pads, soft pulses, low-detail percussion
The goal is to make the product feel clear before the viewer reads a caption or hears a voiceover. A crowded track can make a premium product feel rushed. A track that feels too slow can make a quick product ad drag.
The best choice comes from the product’s position. A budget-friendly lip gloss ad can use brighter music. A premium serum launch may need something calmer, slower, and more refined.
Match the music to the buying moment
Beauty product videos show up in ads, product pages, launch emails, marketplaces, and short-form campaigns, so the track should match the job the video needs to do.
Product demos
Use music with a steady pace. The track should support the order of actions: open, apply, show texture, show result, show packaging, close with the product shot.
Paid ads
Choose music that starts quickly. The first few seconds need movement because the viewer may scroll away. Use a track with a clear opening, but keep it clean enough for text overlays and product claims.
Launch clips
Use music that creates anticipation without becoming theatrical. A subtle build can work well for a new product reveal, especially when the edit moves from packaging details to the final hero shot.
E-commerce videos
Choose music that feels clear and steady. The viewer needs to see the product, understand the benefit, and picture buying it. Overly dramatic music can make a simple product clip feel forced.
Close-up beauty shots
Give the visuals space. Texture, shine, color, and packaging are doing a lot of work. A track with fewer layers can help the product feel more tactile and premium.
A useful test: play the video without looking at the screen. The music should tell you the product feels clean, polished, fresh, premium, playful, or bold. Then watch the video muted. The edit should still make sense. When both tests work, the track is supporting the product instead of covering for weak pacing.
Use licensed music that fits ads, e-commerce, and client delivery
Beauty product videos often move across channels.
A freelancer may deliver the same product clip to a client for Instagram, TikTok, a Shopify product page, and a paid ad. A beauty brand may cut one launch video into shorter versions for Reels, Stories, product pages, and email.
That makes licensing important.
Audiodrome’s license allows commercial or non-commercial video use, social content and social advertising, client projects, and platform monetization when the music stays embedded in the finished project. It also allows editing, looping, fading, and adapting the recording inside the project.
Keep the workflow simple:
- Choose a track before the edit gets locked
- Cut the product demo around the track’s natural sections
- Keep the license details with the project file
- Export versions for ads, ecommerce pages, and social clips
- Give the client the finished video, not the raw music file
