Music itself is timeless, but the industry behind it, including music stocks, has been completely transformed. Streaming displaced physical sales. Social media replaced the traditional record label pipeline. Live events became the primary revenue engine for artists, and the power that once sat with a handful of major labels is now spread across a much wider ecosystem.
That shift creates an interesting investment landscape. Music stocks span a surprisingly broad range of businesses: streaming platforms, record labels, live event organizers, satellite and terrestrial radio companies, and manufacturers of instruments and audio equipment. Each sits at a different point in the music value chain, with different growth profiles and risk factors to match.
Top music stocks to consider
Data as of May 9, 2026. Showing 6 of 6 tickers.

Today’s Change
(-2.25%) $-9.60
Current Price
$417.83
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$86B
Day’s Range
$416.26 – $427.48
52wk Range
$405.00 – $785.00
Volume
1.8M
Avg Vol
2.5M
Gross Margin
32.21%
Spotify (SPOT -2.25%) pioneered legal music streaming more than a decade ago. It has since expanded beyond music by acquiring several podcast franchises. The streaming giant now counts high-profile creators such as Joe Rogan and Bill Simmons among its podcasters.
Spotify’s paid subscriber base has now reached 290 million, growing 10% in 2025. It had more than 750 million monthly active users, which included ad-supported listeners.
Along its path to success, the company has beaten back consistent threats from Apple (AAPL +2.08%) and others. It now tops the iPhone maker in podcast listeners, making it the No. 1 podcast platform in the U.S. and showing that the pure-play audio stock is beating the tech giant.
Spotify’s profits are starting to ramp higher after years of investment. The company should benefit from the subscription business model, which means that most of its incremental revenue flows directly to the bottom line as the marginal cost of adding a subscriber.
The company is now solidly profitable on an International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) basis. The future looks bright for Spotify, as its revenue growth is solid and its margins should continue to expand.
2. Sirius XM Holdings

Today’s Change
(1.31%) $0.35
Current Price
$27.10
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$9.1B
Day’s Range
$26.25 – $27.11
52wk Range
$19.77 – $28.77
Volume
2.8M
Avg Vol
4.8M
Gross Margin
40.75%
Dividend Yield
3.99%
As the only satellite radio provider in the U.S., SiriusXM (SIRI +1.31%) stands out for relying on satellites to transmit its music and other audio content. The company can provide reliable service in places where internet-based music platforms fall short. SiriusXM is most often used inside vehicles since most car models have its technology pre-installed.
The company provides a range of audio entertainment, including music, sports, news, talk, and traffic and weather updates. Its brand may be best associated with Howard Stern, the shock jock who attracted a lot of attention in 2005 when he took his talk radio show to SiriusXM. Stern recently signed a contract extension for three years through 2028.
Sirius also acquired Pandora in 2019, increasing its exposure to music streaming. However, the company lags well behind Spotify in that area.
The satellite radio company has historically increased its revenue at only a modest pace because growth in the on-demand music business has favored streaming services. However, revenue has been roughly flat since the start of 2023. As of the end of 2025, the company had 33 million subscribers on SiriusXM and 5.6 million on Pandora.
Improved internet connectivity and the expansion of 5G networks pose a longer-term threat to Sirius XM, as do new technologies like Elon Musk’s Starlink and Amazon‘s (AMZN +0.55%) Kuiper.
3. Sonos

Today’s Change
(1.14%) $0.17
Current Price
$15.06
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$1.8B
Day’s Range
$14.57 – $15.11
52wk Range
$9.65 – $19.82
Volume
1.6M
Avg Vol
1.5M
Gross Margin
44.74%
Wireless speaker maker Sonos (SONO +1.14%) calls itself the inventor of multiroom wireless audio products. With around 100 streaming partners, including Apple Music, Pandora, and Spotify, Sonos is the leading pure-play company in its niche of the music industry. It finished its fiscal year 2024 with 50.4 million products registered in 16.3 million households.
After posting strong results earlier in its history, revenue growth has faded, though it returned by the end of 2025, up 13% in the fourth quarter. A problematic app update earlier in 2024 also plagued the company, leading to the ouster of CEO Patrick Spence and the layoff of about 200 employees.
The company also faces competitive threats from tech giants such as Amazon, Alphabet‘s (GOOG +0.41%)(GOOGL +0.66%) Google, and Apple, all of which are investing significant resources in their own smart speakers. Investors in Sonos should be aware of these competitive pressures.
4. Live Nation Entertainment

Live Nation Entertainment
Today’s Change
(-1.49%) $-2.47
Current Price
$163.28
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$38B
Day’s Range
$162.25 – $167.01
52wk Range
$125.34 – $175.25
Volume
3.6M
Avg Vol
3.2M
Gross Margin
23.30%
Live Nation Entertainment (LYV -1.49%), which owns Ticketmaster, has a near-monopoly in concert ticketing, with more than 70% of the market. Recording artists are increasingly performing at live events to earn money since CD and physical album sales are essentially dead, and music festivals have become more popular in the era of social media.
Demand for live events remains strong, and Live Nation is benefiting. The company posted record results in 2025 with revenue up 9% to $25.2 billion.
In April, a jury found that Ticketmaster and Live Nation had an anticompetitive monopoly, which could force the company to sell off some assets, including its concert venues.
5. iHeartMedia

Today’s Change
(0.18%) $0.01
Current Price
$5.68
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$859M
Day’s Range
$5.40 – $5.80
52wk Range
$1.11 – $6.56
Volume
1.1M
Avg Vol
1M
Gross Margin
48.94%
Formerly known as Clear Channel, iHeartMedia (IHRT +0.18%) is the biggest operator of broadcast radio stations in the U.S. It finished 2024 with 250 AM stations and 619 FM stations and, in the same year, had the most No. 1-ranked stations across the top markets, including 24 top-ranked stations in the 50 biggest markets.
The company also operates iHeartRadio, a digital audio streaming service that gives users access to both streaming music and the digital feeds of radio stations nationwide. Broadcast advertising is the company’s primary source of revenue, but competition from platforms like Spotify seems to be eating into the company’s market share.
The company has struggled to grow revenue in recent quarters due to headwinds in the terrestrial radio market, and revenue in 2025 fell, revenue up 3.6% to $3.87 billion. It’s also taken impairment charges of almost $1 billion in each of 2023 and 2024, showing the declining value of terrestrial radio licenses and write-offs in its goodwill.
Historically, the company’s advertising model has been highly profitable, and its reach gives it a competitive advantage since iHeartMedia can offer advertisers the most exposure in radio by far. However, the digital radio space is crowded with competition from Spotify, Sirius XM, and others, and terrestrial radio appears to be in long-term decline, so the future could be challenging for iHeartMedia.
6. Warner Music Group

Today’s Change
(7.47%) $2.32
Current Price
$33.36
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$17B
Day’s Range
$31.93 – $33.60
52wk Range
$23.34 – $34.63
Volume
6.6M
Avg Vol
2.4M
Gross Margin
40.16%
Dividend Yield
2.25%
Legacy record labels, such as Warner Records, Atlantic Records, Asylum, and Elektra — all of which are owned by Warner Music Group (WMG +7.47%) — still help high-profile musicians with marketing, management, and production. Ed Sheeran, Cardi B, and Bruno Mars all have contracts with labels owned by Warner Music Group.
The company earns most of its money from recorded music and also generates revenue from music publishing, which is the acquisition and licensing of musical compositions. Both of those categories are growing as the recorded music business enjoys a significant boost from the rapid growth in music streaming.
In fiscal 2025, which ended in September 2025, revenue rose 4% to $6.71 billion, and management said it’s gaining market share in recorded music streaming. It’s also facing difficult comparisons with its strong performance in the quarter a year ago.
In March, Warner Music announced to an agreement with Netflix (NFLX -0.91%) to license its intellectual property for movies and documentaries based on its performers and songs, showing another way it can monetize its catalog.
How to invest in music stocks
Investing in music stocks follows the same process as buying any other publicly traded company. To do so, just follow the steps below.
- Open your brokerage app: Log in to your brokerage account where you handle your investments.
- Search for the music stock: Enter the ticker or company name into the search bar to bring up the stock’s trading page.
- Decide how many shares to buy: Consider your investment goals and how much of your portfolio you want to allocate to this stock.
- Select order type: Choose between a market order to buy at the current price or a limit order to specify the maximum price you’re willing to pay.
- Submit your order: Confirm the details and submit your buy order.
- Review your purchase: Check your portfolio to ensure your order was filled as expected and adjust your investment strategy accordingly.
Benefits and risks of investing in music stocks
There are pros and cons to investing in music stocks. Music is a timeless interest, and there will always be a business surrounding it. That includes both demand for live events, as music and concerts continue to be a strong draw for young adults, and recorded music, even as the way we consume recorded music has changed significantly. Let’s take a look at the benefits and risks of music stocks.
Benefits:
- There’s consistent global demand for music entertainment.
- Music festivals and concerts are highly popular with young adults.
- New technologies and media have made it easier for audiences to find new music.
- Leaders like Spotify and Live Nation show music stocks can be big winners.
Risks:
- Technology can change quickly, rendering leaders obsolete and changing business models.
- Demand can fluctuate depending on the popularity of top artists.
- Changes in technology and tastes make the industry risky.
- Tech giants pose a threat to the music industry.
Should you invest in music stocks?
Looking forward, the music industry is likely to shift further to streaming-first consumption. While terrestrial and satellite radio won’t disappear, the ubiquity of internet connections and car interfaces that make apps like Spotify easy to access should drive market share toward streaming, which gives listeners the most control over what they hear.
Similarly, the growth of streaming has put pressure on recording artists by killing the recorded music business model. That has led to more artists touring as their primary form of earning money, and social media culture has also driven demand for concerts and music festivals. That trend seems likely to continue, which is good news for Live Nation, notwithstanding the finding that it has an illegal monopoly.
Technology is likely to continue to affect the music industry as well. That includes new devices for listening to music like smart speakers, new ways to access music like virtual reality, and new ways to create music like artificial intelligence (AI).
Music stocks are risky as the industry is susceptible to technological disruption and rapid change, but the success of Spotify and some other stocks shows that there is significant upside for businesses that establish competitive advantages and deliver growth.
Related investing topics
FAQ: Music stocks
Jeremy Bowman has positions in Amazon and Netflix. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Berkshire Hathaway, Netflix, Sonos, and Spotify Technology. The Motley Fool recommends Live Nation Entertainment. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

