Royalty-Free Music for Cat Videos
Choose tracks for playful clips, calm moments, and pet creator posts

Cat videos need music that supports the moment fast.
A kitten jumping at a toy needs a different track than a sleepy cat curled on a sofa. A rescue update needs a softer bed than a quick comedy edit. A brand post for cat food needs music that feels clean, licensed, and ready for repeat use.
Choose music that fits the cat, the edit, and the publishing use
Cat videos work best when the music follows small actions.
A paw tap, a jump, a stare, a stretch, or a slow blink can carry the whole clip. The track should leave space for those moments instead of covering them up.
Use playful music for quick funny clips
Funny cat clips need music that lands fast.
Use light percussion, short melodic phrases, playful plucks, or simple loops for jump cuts, reaction edits, zoom-ins, and caption-led jokes.
A 7-second Reel with a cat knocking over a toy needs a track that gets to the point right away. If the intro takes too long, the joke may land before the music does.
Use calm music for cozy or emotional clips
Calm cat videos need softer pacing.
Use gentle keys, warm acoustic textures, quiet lo-fi, or soft ambient tracks for nap videos, rescue updates, adoption posts, cozy home clips, and slow B-roll.
The track should support the mood without making the clip feel heavy. Leave room for purring, room tone, voiceover, or on-screen text.
Use consistent tracks for pet creator series
A cat creator account may post funny clips, calm clips, and update videos every week.
A small set of related tracks can make the account feel consistent without making every video sound the same. For example, use one upbeat track style for playful clips, one softer style for cozy clips, and one cleaner track style for brand posts.
When cat videos need commercial-use music
A casual cat clip and a business cat clip can look almost the same.
The difference is how the video gets used.
A pet creator may post a funny clip to grow an account. A freelancer may deliver three cat café Reels to a client. A brand may post a cat product demo, run an ad, or reuse the same track across a campaign.
Those uses need music with clear permission for the publishing plan.
For cat content, that usually means checking the license before you:
- publish a sponsored post
- deliver the video to a client
- run the clip as an ad
- reuse the track across several brand posts
- upload the same edit across platforms
Audiodrome’s license covers personal, commercial, and client projects when the music stays embedded inside the finished video. That means a pet creator, freelancer, or brand team can use licensed tracks in social clips, YouTube uploads, client edits, ads, and other finished content without sending the raw music file to a client.
The one-time payment and lifetime access model also works well for recurring cat content, where the same creator may need music for weekly posts, sponsored clips, and repeat campaign edits.
Before publishing, save the track name, receipt, license terms, and final project file. That gives you a cleaner record if a platform asks for proof or a client needs confirmation later.
