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iHeart: Music, Radio, Podcasts
iHeartMedia, Inc.
Rating 4.6star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
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4.5

One-line summary iHeart is easy to recommend if you want one free app for live radio, playlists, and podcasts, but it is less convincing for listeners who want tighter control over playback and more consistently smart music curation.

  • Installs

    50M+

  • Developer

    iHeartMedia, Inc.

  • Category

    Audio

  • Content Rating

    Teen

  • Latest version

    VARY

  • Package

    com.clearchannel.iheartradio.controller

In-depth review
After spending real time with iHeart: Music, Radio, Podcasts, the biggest thing that stands out is how broad and practical it feels. This is not a music app trying to be only a music app, and it is not a podcast app awkwardly stapled onto a radio service. It genuinely works as a central listening hub for people who bounce between FM-style stations, artist-based mixes, talk radio, sports, and podcasts over the course of a normal day. That all-in-one identity is iHeart’s strongest advantage, and in everyday use it makes the app easier to live with than many more narrowly focused services. The best experience here starts with discovery and convenience. Open the app and it does not take much effort to find something worth playing. Searching for an artist quickly leads into an artist-based station or mix, and if you prefer old-school radio, there is a huge range of live stations to jump into. In testing, that flexibility made iHeart especially good as a background companion. It is the kind of app you can start in the morning with a local station, switch to a podcast during errands, then move to a mood playlist later in the day without ever feeling like you need a different app. That smooth shift between formats gives iHeart a sense of usefulness that is easy to appreciate. A second strength is that the free experience is surprisingly generous. For a free app, iHeart often feels less punishing than expected. Ads are present, and this is not an ad-free paradise unless you move into paid features, but the free tier still feels functional rather than deliberately crippled. We were able to listen for long stretches without feeling constantly interrupted, and the app does a good job of staying out of the way when you just want audio running in the background. That matters more than flashy design. In practical terms, iHeart works well as a daily driver for listeners who simply want something reliable, varied, and low-friction. The third major strength is the breadth of content itself. The app is at its best when you do not want to overthink what to play. There is enough range here to satisfy listeners who move across genres, and the podcast catalog adds real value rather than serving as a token extra. Live radio is also a meaningful differentiator. There is still something uniquely appealing about tuning into actual stations, hearing local flavor, and getting programming that feels less algorithmic. iHeart captures that well. If you miss the spontaneity of traditional radio but also want on-demand options, this app occupies a sweet spot. That said, living with iHeart for a while also reveals some rough edges. The first is control. If you are the kind of listener who wants exact song-by-song authority on the free tier, iHeart can feel limiting. It often leans more toward radio-style listening than true on-demand freedom unless you subscribe. For many people that will be acceptable, even familiar, but users coming in expecting total playback control may run into frustration fairly quickly. The second weak spot is recommendation quality and playlist logic. Much of the time, iHeart does a respectable job keeping the vibe consistent, but it is not flawless. In our use, the app occasionally inserted tracks that technically matched an artist or genre connection but missed the energy or mood of the playlist. That can break immersion, especially if you spent time shaping a certain atmosphere. When the curation lands, it is very good; when it misses, it can feel oddly tone-deaf. The third complaint is polish in small but noticeable areas. We ran into moments where playback did not feel as stable as it should, including the occasional stop that made us reopen or restart a stream. It was not constant enough to make the app unusable, but it happened often enough to notice. There are also a few convenience gaps that become more obvious over time, like wanting better visibility into track details or easier management of large playlists. These are not deal-breakers, but they do keep the app from feeling truly premium in execution. From a design standpoint, iHeart is straightforward rather than elegant. That is mostly a compliment. It is easy to navigate, and core actions are simple enough that you do not have to relearn the app every time you open it. Favorites, stations, playlists, and podcasts are presented in a way that makes sense for regular use. The interface does not feel especially adventurous, but it does feel approachable, which is more important for an app meant to stay open for hours at a time. Who is this app for? It is for listeners who want variety and convenience above all else. If you like the idea of one app handling music discovery, live radio, sports talk, local stations, and podcasts, iHeart is a very comfortable fit. It is also a strong pick for casual listeners who are happy to let the app do some of the work and who do not need absolute control over every track. Who is it not for? It is not ideal for picky listeners who want fully deterministic playback on the free version, or for people who are especially sensitive to occasional recommendation misses and small playback hiccups. If your top priority is building perfectly curated playlists with zero surprises, iHeart may feel a little too radio-minded. Overall, iHeart succeeds because it makes everyday listening easy. It has range, it is welcoming to free users, and it blends radio, music, and podcasts more naturally than many apps in this category. It also has enough annoyances to remind you that convenience and precision are not always the same thing. But taken as a whole, iHeart is one of the more useful and enjoyable all-purpose audio apps you can keep on your phone, especially if your listening habits are broad and your expectations are realistic.
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