edjing Mix's hidden subscription charges and bugs in core scratching and mixing tools have driven users to look elsewhere. These DJ apps offer transparent pricing, professional feature sets, and the streaming service integration edjing struggles to match.
Each app below addresses a specific gap in edjing Mix's offering. We picked them based on real user review patterns and feature differentiation.
djay Pro from Algoriddim is the gold standard of mobile DJ apps and the only mainstream DJ app with full Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal, and SoundCloud integration. AI-powered Neural Mix lets you isolate vocals, drums, and instrumentals from any track in real time. The free tier is genuinely usable and the paid tier is reasonable.
Explore djay Pro by Algoriddim data →Cross DJ from Mixvibes is one of the longest-running mobile DJ apps with a professional feature set including 3-band EQ, beat sync, looping, hot cues, and external controller support. The pricing is transparent and the upgrade is a one-time purchase rather than the subscription model edjing pushes.
Explore Cross DJ data →WeDJ is the official mobile DJ app from Pioneer DJ (now AlphaTheta) — the dominant brand in professional DJ hardware. It integrates seamlessly with Pioneer DDJ controllers, includes beat sync, hot cues, and effects. Best pick if you want a path from mobile DJing to professional hardware.
Explore WeDJ by AlphaTheta (Pioneer DJ) data →Serato DJ Lite is the mobile entry point to Serato — the most-used DJ software in clubs worldwide. The mobile app is free and syncs with the desktop ecosystem, making it the best on-ramp if you're learning DJing as a craft rather than just remixing music for fun.
Explore Serato DJ Lite data →YouDJ Mixer is the simplest DJ app on this list — designed for absolute beginners with a stripped-down interface and minimal upsell. No subscription pressure, no hidden charges, and no critical bugs in the basic mixing flow. Best pick if you found edjing too complicated or too aggressive about upsells.
Explore YouDJ Mixer data →DJ Music Mixer from Easyelife is a budget-friendly alternative to edjing with simple one-time in-app purchases instead of subscriptions. The features are basic compared to djay or Cross DJ but the lack of subscription pressure is refreshing for casual users.
Explore DJ Music Mixer (Easyelife) data →We found these alternatives by analyzing review patterns across DJ and music creation apps. edjing's most common churn drivers are pricing concerns, surprise subscription fees, ads interrupting the DJ flow, and bugs in core mixing tools. The apps below each address at least one of those friction points directly.
djay Pro by Algoriddim is widely considered the best mobile DJ app for serious users — it's the only mainstream app with full Spotify and Apple Music integration, has professional features like Neural Mix stem separation, and the pricing is transparent. Cross DJ is the runner-up for users who prefer one-time purchases over subscriptions.
Reviews flag surprised subscription fees as a recurring issue — the upsell pressure is high and some features that look free actually require a subscription. djay Pro and Cross DJ are both more transparent about what's free vs paid.
Yes — djay Pro, WeDJ, and Cross DJ all support a range of MIDI DJ controllers from Pioneer, Numark, Reloop, and others. WeDJ is best for Pioneer hardware specifically. This is the upgrade path if you want to move from casual mobile mixing to performing.
App Vulture uses AI-powered review intelligence to analyze what real users say about apps — their pain points, feature requests, and reasons for switching. We identified these alternatives by analyzing review patterns across DJ and music creation apps and validated each candidate against the source app's most common churn reasons.
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