Navidrome vs Plex for Music: Which Should You Self-Host?
Quick Verdict
Navidrome is the better dedicated music server. It’s lighter, free, and gives you access to 50+ polished Subsonic-compatible music apps. Plex’s music experience through Plexamp is genuinely excellent — arguably the best single music client available — but requires a Plex Pass ($5/month or $120 lifetime) and is part of a larger, resource-heavier platform.
Overview
Navidrome is a lightweight, open-source music server written in Go. It implements the Subsonic API, giving you access to a massive ecosystem of dedicated music clients. It runs as a single container with embedded SQLite, uses ~50 MB of RAM, and does one thing: stream your music collection.
Plex is a proprietary, full-featured media server for movies, TV, music, photos, and live TV. Its music experience centers on Plexamp, a dedicated music player app that rivals commercial streaming apps in polish and features. However, Plexamp requires a Plex Pass subscription, and Plex itself is a heavier platform running video transcoding, metadata agents, and a media management system.
Feature Comparison (Music Only)
| Feature | Navidrome | Plex (with Plexamp) |
|---|---|---|
| Primary focus | Music only | All media types |
| Dedicated music apps | 50+ (Subsonic ecosystem) | Plexamp (iOS, Android, desktop) |
| Subsonic API | Full compatibility | No |
| Sonic Scrobbler / Last.fm | Built-in | Built-in (Plex Pass) |
| ListenBrainz scrobbling | Built-in | Via Plex scrobbler |
| Smart playlists | Yes (free) | Yes (Plex Pass) |
| Gapless playback | Client-dependent | Yes (Plexamp) |
| Crossfade | Client-dependent | Yes (Plexamp) |
| Loudness normalization | ReplayGain (client-side) | Yes (server-side + client) |
| Sonic analysis (mood/genre) | No | Yes (Plexamp — Sonic Sage) |
| Lyrics (synced) | Client-dependent | Yes (Plexamp) |
| Internet radio | Yes | No |
| Offline downloads | Client-dependent | Yes (Plexamp) |
| Artist bios / reviews | No | Yes (from metadata agents) |
| Multi-user | Yes | Yes |
| Transcoding | Yes (FFmpeg) | Yes (server-side) |
| RAM (idle, music only) | ~50 MB | ~300-600 MB |
| Cost | Free (GPL-3.0) | Free (limited) + $5/mo Plex Pass |
| License | Open source | Proprietary |
Installation Complexity
Navidrome takes minutes. One container, one volume for your music, one for config. No database, no setup wizard, no account creation on an external website. Start the container, open the web UI, create a user, done.
Plex requires creating a plex.tv account, claiming the server with a time-limited token (expires in 4 minutes), and navigating an initial setup wizard. Adding music libraries works well, but configuring Plexamp-specific features (loudness normalization, Sonic Sage analysis) requires additional steps. The PLEX_CLAIM token UX adds unnecessary friction.
Performance and Resource Usage
| Metric | Navidrome | Plex |
|---|---|---|
| RAM (idle) | ~50 MB | ~300-600 MB |
| RAM (streaming music) | ~100 MB | ~400-700 MB |
| CPU (music playback) | Negligible | Low |
| CPU (library scan) | Low | High (music analysis) |
| Disk (application) | ~30 MB | ~1 GB+ |
| Startup time | 2-3 seconds | 15-30 seconds |
Navidrome is dramatically lighter. If music is your only need, Plex’s overhead for video transcoding, DLNA, and media analysis is wasted resources. Plex’s Sonic Sage music analysis also consumes significant CPU during initial library scans.
On a Raspberry Pi 4 or low-powered mini PC, Navidrome barely registers while Plex can be sluggish during metadata fetches and analysis.
Community and Support
Navidrome has an active open-source community (~13K GitHub stars). Issues get addressed quickly, the documentation is clear, and the developer is highly responsive. Being open-source means you can inspect code, contribute fixes, and fork if needed.
Plex has a massive user base and active forums/subreddits. However, Plex is a commercial product — feature requests are at the company’s discretion, and the development roadmap isn’t community-driven. Recent controversies around Plex’s ad-supported streaming, data collection, and authentication requirements have pushed some users toward open-source alternatives.
Use Cases
Choose Navidrome If…
- Music streaming is your primary need
- You want access to 50+ Subsonic-compatible clients (Symfonium, Ultrasonic, play:Sub)
- You want everything free with no subscriptions
- You’re running on limited hardware
- You prefer open-source and community-driven development
- You don’t want to create a plex.tv account or depend on external authentication
Choose Plex (with Plexamp) If…
- You already run Plex for video and want music in the same ecosystem
- Plexamp’s polish matters to you (crossfade, sonic analysis, offline mode)
- You’re willing to pay for Plex Pass
- You want server-side loudness normalization
- A single, highly polished music app is more important to you than ecosystem choice
Final Verdict
Navidrome wins on value, openness, and flexibility. It’s free, lightweight, and gives you the broadest client ecosystem. The Subsonic API means you can pick from dozens of polished music apps — Symfonium on Android is arguably as good as Plexamp.
Plexamp wins on individual app polish. If you judge purely by the quality of the default music client, Plexamp is hard to beat — sonic analysis, crossfade, visual polish, and offline mode are top-tier. But you pay for it ($5/month or $120 lifetime), you’re locked into one client, and you need the full Plex server running.
For most self-hosters, Navidrome is the better choice. You get 90% of the experience at 0% of the cost and 20% of the resource usage.
FAQ
Can I run Navidrome alongside Plex?
Yes. Point both at the same music directory (read-only). Run Navidrome for daily music streaming and keep Plex for video. This is a common setup that gives you the best of both worlds.
Is Plexamp free?
No. Plexamp requires a Plex Pass subscription ($5/month, $40/year, or $120 lifetime). The basic Plex music player (not Plexamp) is free but lacks the advanced features that make Plex’s music experience compelling.
Which has better mobile apps for music?
It depends on your definition. Plexamp is a single, extremely polished app. Navidrome gives you access to 50+ apps via Subsonic API — some are excellent (Symfonium, play:Sub), others are basic. Plexamp wins on individual app quality; Navidrome wins on choice.
Does Plex require internet access to play local music?
Plex requires authentication through plex.tv servers. If Plex’s auth servers go down (this has happened), you can’t access your own music. Navidrome has no external dependencies — it works entirely offline.
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