8 best equalizer apps for Android

8 best equalizer apps for Android

Wavelet best new android apps june 2020

Android has always been a little funny about equalizers. The OS has supported equalizers for a while. However, it’s still not a great experience. Some music apps have them, and some devices have native ones in the settings that work system-wide. However, many apps like YouTube Music don’t, and it’s weird to get it all to work all the time. Here are some great equalizer apps for Android to try.

We’ve reached a point where your best options are the cookie-cutter EQs with bass boost and other simple presets. We have a few of those listed. However, we think most people will want to try Poweramp Equalizer and Wavelet, as they have cornered the market here. Thankfully, they are both very good.

The best equalizer apps for Android

Equalizer and Bass Booster

Price: Free

Equalizer and Bass Boost screenshot 2022

Equalizer and Bass Booster is fairly self-explanatory. It has an equalizer and a bass booster. To be more specific, it includes a five-band equalizer, ten equalizer presets, and a bass booster. The developers state that it should work with most music players, video players, and FM radio. The only major issue is that the app will close sometimes when left in the background, and sometimes it doesn’t always work. It’s one of the simpler equalizer apps and it should work on most devices.

Equalizer FX

Price: Free / $1.99

Equalizer FX is one of the cleaner, more modern equalizer apps. It is exceptionally easy to use. It comes with a five-band equalizer, bass boost, virtualization, and even a loudness enhancer (Android 4.4 and up only). Like most, it comes with a widget along with presets to get you started. The developer has also stated that this should work with most music players, including Spotify, Google Play Music, Pandora, and others. The paid version is the same as the free version. It just removes advertising.

Music Volume EQ

Price: Free

Music Volume EQ - best equalizer apps for Android

Music Volume EQ and Bass Booster is one of the most popular equalizer apps out there. Thankfully, it actually works pretty well. It includes the standard five band EQ along with nine EQ presets. Along with that, you’ll get volume control, bass boosting, loudness enhancement, and more. The developers also boast that it should work well with most video and audio players. All in all, it’s a positive experience for a software equalizer. It obviously won’t work with everything and you get more presets from others on this list, but this works okay. It’s also entirely free as far as we could tell.

Poweramp Equalizer

Price: Free / $1.99

Poweramp Equalizer screenshot

Poweramp Equalizer is one of the newest equalizers on the list. The app includes a lot of stuff other equalizers don’t, including a customizable number of bands, bass and treble tone controls, and more. It’s relatively easy to use once you learn the various settings. It should also work with most Bluetooth and wired headphones along with most streaming music apps and local music players. It’s newer so it benefits from its modern approach. This is one of the ones you should try first.

SoundID

Price: Free

SoundID screenshot 2022

SoundID is a unique premise. It tries to make your headphones sound like a different pair of headphones. You can do a lot with digital equalization, and this app proves it. It works with most of the popular streaming and local music players. You can mess around with the sound and make fine adjustments to make everything how you want. It’s a bit more complex of an app than most other equalizers, but it’s not terrible once you get the hang of it. This app has improved dramatically since it first launched, so the developers are also doing a good job of squashing bugs.

Wavelet

Price: Free / $5.49

Wavelet screenshot 2022

Wavelet is the newest equalizer app on the list, comparatively speaking. It came out in 2020 and it’s not half bad. The app includes a 9-band equalizer along with a bunch of various presets if you want to keep it simple. Additionally, it includes the ability to auto-EQ to over 2,400 different pairs of headphones. The AutoEQ function measures and compensates to the Harman curve for optimal sound. This sounds like an advertisement, right? In any case, this one is actually really good and among the best you can get without root access.

Many music player apps

Price: Free / Varies

BlackPlayer EX, one of the best equalizer apps

Many music player apps have equalizers built-in. Some notable examples include UAPP (up to 10-band), jetAudio (up to 20-band), and Neutron Player (up to 60-band). These apps have effective equalizers that do actually change the sound. However, they only work within the app. Thus, those of you that stream music can’t use the equalizers in these apps for your streaming music. On the other hand, those with private collections can use these all day. Music player apps vary in price and functionality, but it’s almost difficult to find a bad one these days.

See also: The best music player apps for Android

On-device equalizers

Price: Free (usually)

LG Quad DAC Digital Filter

Many Android OEMs have EQs in the sound section of the settings. Some devices do it better than others, but about half of them let you adjust device-wide audio through an EQ. Usually it’s something close to a 10-band EQ along with some added stuff like Dolby Atmos or EQ presets. LG devices with Quad DACs have a 10-band EQ and a separate set of presets you can also apply. Sony’s more modern devices with headphone jacks also have some extras. Finally, most Bluetooth headsets have some configurable sound profiles that you should also check out. It really depends on what you want, but Samsung and LG tend to do it a little bit better than the others.


If we missed any great equalizer apps, tell us about them in the comments below. You can also click here to check out our latest Android app and game lists.

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