As a longtime subscriber to both services, I've learned the hard way that playlist portability isn't their priority. Amazon Music's library leans heavily on licensed tracks, while YouTube includes tons of user uploads and covers that'll vanish during transfers. When I moved my workout playlist last year, about 30% of songs failed to transfer because either Amazon didn't have them or the metadata mismatched.
The workaround? I now maintain a master spreadsheet with artist-song pairs for critical playlists. It sounds obsessive, but when platforms don't play nice, you gotta get creative. For casual listening, I just recreate playlists natively on each service—it's less frustrating than dealing with broken links later.
Nope, not directly—but there's a silver lining! Both platforms let you share playlist links publicly, so I sometimes screen-grab tracklists from one app and rebuild them in the other while discovering new versions of songs along the way. Last month I found an amazing acoustic cover of a pop hit while recreating my YouTube mix on Amazon Music. The manual process can be weirdly rewarding if you treat it like musical archaeology.
Man, I wish this was simpler! I've been juggling playlists between YouTube and Amazon Music for ages, and it's a bit of a headache. There's no direct way to transfer them automatically—you'll have to rebuild playlists manually or use third-party tools like Soundiiz or TuneMyMusic. These services can sync your playlists across platforms by pulling song metadata, but they sometimes struggle with matching tracks perfectly, especially with live versions or obscure remixes.
That said, if you're committed to switching, I'd recommend exporting your YouTube playlist to a CSV first (using sites like 'Exportify'), then importing that into Amazon Music's desktop app. It's tedious, but I've had better accuracy this way than with automated tools. Just be prepared for some tracks to go missing—licensing differences between platforms mean not everything carries over.
2026-07-11 18:20:06
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Man, I've been down this rabbit hole before! Transferring playlists between YouTube and Deezer isn't natively supported by either platform, but third-party tools like 'Soundiiz' or 'TuneMyMusic' can bridge the gap. They scan your YouTube playlist and match tracks to Deezer's library—though some obscure covers or live versions might get lost in translation.
I tried this last month with my 90s alt-rock playlist, and it worked surprisingly well for mainstream tracks. The free versions usually cap transfers at 100-200 songs, but if you're as playlist-obsessed as I am, their premium plans are worth it for bulk moves. Just be prepared to manually tweak a few mismatched titles afterward!
Music streaming has become such a huge part of my daily routine that I've accumulated playlists across multiple platforms over the years. When I wanted to consolidate my favorite workout tracks from Spotify to YouTube Music, I discovered Soundiiz – a web-based service with a free tier that handles basic playlist transfers between most major platforms. The free version limits you to 200 tracks per playlist and requires manual confirmation for each transfer, but it's surprisingly smooth for occasional use. I also stumbled upon TuneMyMusic during my search, which offers similar functionality with a slightly different interface. Both preserve most metadata, though some niche songs might not match perfectly across services.
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I recently switched from Tidal to Amazon Music and had to transfer my playlists, so I know the struggle! The time it takes depends on a few factors, like the number of songs and the tool you use. I tried Soundiiz, and it took about 10-15 minutes for a 100-song playlist. Free tools might be slower or have limits, while paid services like TuneMyMusic can do it in under 5 minutes if the servers aren’t overloaded.
One thing to watch out for is metadata mismatches—sometimes songs don’t transfer if the titles or artists don’t match exactly. I had to manually fix a few tracks, which added another 20 minutes. If you’re patient, it’s a smooth process, but if you’re in a hurry, paying for a premium transfer service is worth it. Either way, seeing my favorite playlists on Amazon Music felt like reuniting with an old friend!