Royalty-Free Music for Food Delivery Ads
Choose music for food delivery ads built around speed, convenience, limited-time offers, and app visuals

Food delivery ads need music that moves fast without getting in the way of the offer.
The viewer may see a burger close-up, a phone order, a discount code, a courier handoff, and a final app screen in a few seconds. The music has to support that pace. It should make the ad feel quick, simple, and ready to act on.
What food delivery ad music needs to do
Food delivery ads usually sell one action: order now.
The music should help the edit feel fast and easy. A steady beat works well for app taps, menu scrolling, food cuts, coupon reveals, delivery shots, and final logo frames.
Use music that matches the ad’s main promise.
Choose the track around the ad’s main promise. A speed ad needs forward motion and a tight rhythm. Convenience-led delivery ads work better with music that feels light and easy. Offer-led ads usually need a clear lift before the discount or call-to-action screen.
A restaurant ad for “free delivery tonight” needs a different sound from a brand video about the chef, dining room, or food story. Keep this page focused on paid performance clips, not full restaurant promos.
Good fit examples:
- A 15-second Instagram ad showing a pizza order from app tap to doorstep
- A YouTube pre-roll ad with a limited-time discount code
- A TikTok-style paid clip showing lunch delivery for office workers
- A restaurant delivery video built around “order in 3 taps”
How to choose the right track for app and offer visuals
Start with the edit.
A food delivery ad often has quick cuts, close-up food shots, animated text, a phone screen, and a clear final offer. The track should leave room for all of that.
Look for these traits:
- A clean intro that starts fast
- A beat that can carry quick cuts
- A short build before the offer reveal
- Light instrumentation under voiceover
- A strong finish for the logo or app screen
Avoid tracks that feel too cinematic, too slow, or too crowded. Big dramatic music can make a simple food offer feel heavy. Dense vocals can fight with captions, voiceover, and price copy.
For app-order visuals, music with clean drums and simple melodic hooks usually works better than busy tracks. The beat gives the editor clear places to cut. The melody gives the ad a bit of character without pulling attention away from the order flow.
For restaurant delivery ads, match the food category. A fresh salad brand may need bright, clean, modern music. A burger offer may need something punchier. A late-night delivery ad may work better with electronic or hip-hop energy.
Licensing checks before you run the ad
A paid food delivery ad needs music cleared for commercial use.
This check matters more when the ad promotes a restaurant, delivery app, coupon, sponsor, or client campaign. A track saved from a social app audio library may fit a casual post, but that alone is not proof that the same track is cleared for paid advertising across every channel.
Audiodrome’s license permits social content and social advertising when the music stays embedded in the finished Project. It also covers unlimited Projects and social accounts owned or controlled by the buyer or their clients, based on the agreement terms.
Keep the track embedded in the finished ad. Do not send the raw music file to a client as a reusable asset. For client delivery, give the finished video, keep the raw track out of the handoff, and share the license copy with the client.
Before publishing, save:
- track name
- purchase receipt
- license copy
- campaign name
- final exported ad file
- client approval, if the ad is client work
That gives the marketer, freelancer, or restaurant owner a clear record if a platform asks for proof.
Audiodrome’s picks for food delivery ads
A listing video usually needs a track that stays steady. The viewer needs time to understand the layout, finishes, and natural light. Avoid tracks with sudden drops, loud vocal hooks, or sharp changes that fight the edit.

