Switching to YouTube Music gets easier with new Apple Music playlist export tool

Posted:
in Apple Music edited August 28

Three years after Apple built an iCloud photo library transfer tool for Google Photos, the company has introduced a version for exporting Apple Music playlists to YouTube Music.

Export options selection screen showing Apple Music playlists and iCloud photos and videos, with Back and Next buttons.
Transfer playlists from Apple Music to YouTube Music



Apple is offering the new Apple Music playlist transfer feature as a part of its data export tools on the Data and Privacy page. The details were revealed in a new support document published by Apple on Tuesday.

The process is very straightforward. Users log into the Data and Privacy page on Apple's support website. Select "Transfer a copy of your data," and the Apple Music playlist transfer option appears.

The user needs an active Apple Music or iTunes Match subscription to use the tool. A YouTube Music account is also needed, of course.

The transfer will take some time to complete, but once done, an email will notify the user. The synced playlists will appear in the Library tab in YouTube Music.

There are some limitations to the tool, like songs not available on YouTube Music won't sync. This isn't a file sync service, so files won't be transferred. Instead, it is more like other song sync services that match song titles.

Apple Music curated playlists like ALT CTRL won't sync, nor will collaborative playlists owned by other users. Podcasts and other audio files left over from legacy iTunes libraries that aren't music won't transfer either.

The ability to transfer music between services is powered by an open source Data Transfer Project, which Google uses as well. That means those looking to leave YouTube Music and join Apple Music can take similar steps, but starting from Google's dashboard, picking YouTube, then transfer data.

Users looking to move to other services like Spotify will need to stick to paid apps and services like Song Shift.



Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 4
    Who cares?  Google will probably be required to divest Youtube, Chrome, etc. soon anyway.
  • Reply 2 of 4
    mpantonempantone Posts: 2,150member
    shrave10 said:
    Who cares?  Google will probably be required to divest Youtube, Chrome, etc. soon anyway.
    Assuming the service level stays the same, it wouldn't matter to Joe Consumer. They would still be getting the same content regardless of where their subscription fees land.
  • Reply 3 of 4
    Why would you? Apple Music streaming codec quality is unmatched 
    edited August 28
  • Reply 4 of 4
    Kuminga said:
    Why would you? Apple Music streaming codec quality is unmatched 
    Maybe is to use two different services. I use multiple streaming apps and use tunemymusic to keep them synced. Which is also much better to transfer playlists between music app than songshift. 
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