Royalty-Free Music for Virtual Tours
Choose music for property videos, museum walkthroughs, venue previews, and branded experiences

Virtual tours need music that supports the walkthrough without taking attention away from the space.
A property video, museum tour, venue preview, or destination walkthrough already has a job to do. It helps the viewer understand a place. The music should guide the pace, give the tour a finished feel, and leave room for narration, captions, or ambient sound.
Choose music that fits the walkthrough
Start with the tour’s job.
A real estate walkthrough usually needs music that feels clean, calm, and polished. The track should support slow camera movement, room transitions, exterior shots, and closing details. Busy percussion or sharp drops can make the space feel rushed.
A museum or gallery tour needs more restraint. The music should sit under narration and give the exhibits room. Soft piano, light strings, minimal electronic beds, or warm ambient tracks often work well because they support focus.
A hotel, restaurant, event venue, or destination preview can carry more energy. The track can add movement and warmth, especially when the video shows guests arriving, service details, outdoor areas, or branded moments.
For guided tours with voiceover, pick music with a steady structure. Avoid tracks with constant lead melodies, sudden volume jumps, or heavy vocal hooks. The viewer should hear the guide clearly.
For silent tours, the music has more responsibility. It can set pace, signal room changes, and keep the viewer engaged during slower sections. In that case, choose a track with gentle progression so the walkthrough feels intentional.
Match the license to the way the tour will be used
A virtual tour can appear in several places.
A property walkthrough may live on a real estate website, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, a listing page, or inside a client presentation. A museum tour may appear on the museum website, inside an exhibit page, or in a paid campaign. A hotel preview may become a social ad, sales asset, or destination teaser.
That usage affects the music license you need.
Audiodrome’s license covers licensed tracks inside commercial and client Projects, including video, apps, software, games, VR, events, exhibits, and installations, as long as the music stays embedded in the finished project.
Client delivery needs one extra check. Deliver the finished virtual tour to the client, but keep the raw music file and stems out of the handoff. Under Audiodrome’s license, when the track stays embedded, the client receives the finished Project, and no one claims ownership of the music.
Keep proof before you publish. Save the receipt, license copy, track name, project title, and final export date. If a platform flags the music by mistake, clear paperwork gives you something concrete to send.
Audiodrome’s picks for virtual tours
Use Audiodrome when the tour needs licensed music without another subscription
Virtual tour projects often repeat.
A real estate videographer may deliver several listings each month. A venue team may refresh seasonal walkthroughs. A tourism brand may create short previews for several locations. An agency may need music for client tours across social, web, and sales pages.
A recurring subscription can feel heavy for that kind of work.
Audiodrome gives creators, marketers, freelancers, videographers, YouTubers, and businesses access to royalty-free music through one-time payment and lifetime access. The library is curated, so the workflow stays focused: find a track, check the fit, license it, and use it inside the finished tour.
Use Audiodrome for virtual tours that need:
- clean background music under narration
- polished tracks for property videos
- calm music for museum or gallery walkthroughs
- branded music for venue and destination previews
- licensed tracks for client delivery
- music that can stay in the finished project after publication
Pick one track that can carry the full walkthrough, or choose a small set for longer tours with clear sections. For example, a resort preview might use one warm track for the arrival and lobby, then a softer track for rooms and spa areas. A museum walkthrough might use a single minimal piece to avoid distracting from the guide.
