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    2026

    7 Best Sites to Buy Acapellas Online in 2026

    Bas Lefeber
    March 18, 202610 min read

    Quick Summary

    There's no single best place to buy acapellas — it depends on what you need. Dedicated vocal marketplaces (The Vocal Market, Vocalfy, Voclio) give you the most focused experience. General sample platforms (Splice, Loopmasters) have vocals buried in larger libraries. Fiverr and SoundBetter let you commission custom vocals. Looperman is free but inconsistent. This guide breaks down all seven honestly.

    If you're a music producer looking for acapellas, you've probably noticed: the options in 2026 are very different from what they were a few years ago. Dedicated vocal marketplaces exist now. General sample platforms have expanded their vocal offerings. And free sites are still around, for better or worse.

    The question isn't whether you can find acapellas online. It's where you should actually look — and what trade-offs come with each platform.

    Here are 7 sites where you can buy acapellas online in 2026, ranked by how well they serve producers who need vocals specifically. For a broader look at finding acapellas beyond just buying them, check out our complete guide to finding acapellas.

    01

    The Vocal Market

    The Vocal Market is a dedicated acapella marketplace — every product on the platform is a vocal. No drums, no synths, no presets mixed in. You browse vocals, filter by genre, key, BPM, and gender, preview them, and buy what fits your track.

    Full disclosure: this is our platform. But we'll be straight about what we do well and where we're still growing.

    The catalog is curated — every vocal is reviewed before it goes live. That means the quality bar is consistent, but it also means the catalog is smaller than platforms like Vocalfy or Splice. Currently around 500+ vocals. If you need thousands of options to scroll through, that's not us. If you want every vocal to be release-ready, that's exactly us.

    One thing no other platform on this list matches: cover vocals. Professional recordings of well-known songs, ready to flip into your own production. DJs and producers use these for cover remixes — one of the fastest-growing release strategies right now.

    Pricing: One-time purchase, no subscription. Non-exclusive vocals from ~$10, exclusive purchases from ~$30-50+. Buy a vocal exclusively and it's pulled from the catalog — it's yours alone.

    Pros

    • 100% vocal-focused — no noise to filter through
    • Cover vocals collection (unique offering)
    • Exclusive purchase option for full ownership
    • Filter by key, BPM, genre, gender, vocal type
    • No subscription required — pay per vocal

    Cons

    • Smaller catalog than some competitors (~500+ vocals)
    • No subscription model (if you prefer monthly access)
    • Less variety in niche genres outside pop, R&B, house, EDM

    Best for: Producers who want curated, release-ready acapellas with clear licensing — especially if you need cover vocals or exclusive options.

    02

    Vocalfy

    Vocalfy is one of the larger vocal marketplaces out there. They've built a big catalog across genres and styles, and they lean into volume — lots of vocals from lots of vocalists. They also offer a subscription model alongside per-vocal purchases, which works for producers who download regularly.

    The catalog size is a real advantage if you want options. You'll find more variety on Vocalfy than on most dedicated vocal platforms. The trade-off is curation — with a bigger catalog, the quality range is wider. You'll find strong vocals, but you'll also spend more time sifting through ones that don't hit the mark.

    Pricing: Per-vocal purchases + subscription option for regular access.

    Pros

    • Large catalog with lots of genre variety
    • Subscription option for regular downloaders
    • Dedicated vocal platform (not buried in a general library)

    Cons

    • Less curated — quality varies more across the catalog
    • Licensing terms can be unclear on some listings
    • Limited cover vocal options

    Best for: Producers who want a large selection and don't mind spending time browsing to find the right vocal.

    For a detailed breakdown, read our Vocalfy vs The Vocal Market comparison.

    03

    Voclio

    Voclio is a growing vocal marketplace with a clean, modern interface. They're focused on quality over volume, and the browsing experience is solid — easy to find what you're looking for without getting lost in a massive catalog.

    The catalog is still building out, so you won't find the same depth as Vocalfy or the same niche focus as The Vocal Market. But what they have is generally well-produced, and the platform itself is straightforward to use. Worth keeping on your radar as they continue to grow.

    Pricing: Per-vocal purchases.

    Pros

    • Clean interface with a quality-first approach
    • Easy browsing experience
    • Dedicated to vocals (no sample library clutter)

    Cons

    • Smaller, still-growing catalog
    • Fewer filtering options compared to established platforms
    • No cover vocals or exclusive purchase options

    Best for: Producers who value a clean browsing experience and quality curation from a platform that's still in growth mode.

    Read our Voclio vs The Vocal Market comparison for a deeper look.

    04

    Splice

    Splice is one of the biggest names in music production. Over 100 million samples — drums, synths, FX, presets, and yes, vocals. The problem is that "yes, vocals" part. Vocals are a tiny fraction of the Splice catalog, and they're buried among everything else.

    The vocal content that does exist on Splice tends toward short loops, one-word chops, and ad-lib packs. If you need a 4-bar vocal phrase to layer over your beat, Splice can work. If you need a full acapella performance to build a track around, you'll be scrolling for a while — and you'll probably leave empty-handed.

    That said, Splice is still a solid platform. If you already subscribe for drums and synths, it's worth searching for vocals there too. Just don't expect the same focused experience you'd get from a dedicated vocal platform.

    Pricing: Subscription from $9.99/month (credit-based). Cancel and unused credits expire.

    Pros

    • Massive library — if you need other samples too, it's all here
    • Good for short vocal loops and chops
    • Well-known platform with reliable infrastructure

    Cons

    • Vocals are a tiny fraction of the catalog — hard to find
    • Mostly short loops, not full acapella performances
    • No cover vocals, no exclusive options
    • Subscription lock-in — credits expire if you cancel

    Best for: Producers who already use Splice for other samples and want to grab vocal loops or chops while they're there.

    Read our full Splice vs The Vocal Market comparison.

    05

    Loopmasters

    Loopmasters is a long-running sample store that sells sample packs, loops, and sounds across every genre you can think of. They have vocal packs in their catalog — typically bundled sets of vocal phrases, loops, or chops organized by genre or style.

    The vocal packs on Loopmasters are generally well-produced. The issue is the same as Splice: vocals aren't the focus. You're shopping for vocals inside a store built for everything. And because they sell packs rather than individual vocals, you often end up paying for a bundle when you only need one or two vocals from it.

    Pricing: Per-pack purchases + Loopcloud subscription ($7.99/month and up) for individual sample access.

    Pros

    • Well-produced vocal packs from established sound designers
    • Good variety across electronic genres
    • Loopcloud integration for previewing in your DAW

    Cons

    • Vocals aren't the focus — you're digging through a general sample store
    • Pack-based model means paying for content you don't need
    • No individual acapella listings — it's all bundles

    Best for: Producers who want pre-packaged vocal loops and phrases as part of a broader sample shopping session.

    06

    Fiverr / SoundBetter

    These aren't vocal marketplaces in the traditional sense — you're not browsing a catalog of pre-made acapellas. Instead, you're commissioning a vocalist to record something custom for your track. Different workflow, different result.

    Fiverr is the budget-friendly option. You'll find vocalists charging $30-150 for a custom recording, with turnaround times of 3-7 days. Quality ranges from bedroom recordings to semi-professional — you need to check reviews and listen to demo reels carefully.

    SoundBetter sits at the professional end. Session vocalists with real credits, studio-quality recordings, and higher price tags ($100-500+). If you need a specific performance recorded to your specs and budget isn't the primary concern, SoundBetter delivers.

    Pricing: Per-project. Fiverr from ~$30, SoundBetter from ~$100+. Plus revisions, rush fees, and platform commissions.

    Pros

    • Custom vocals recorded to your exact specifications
    • You can request specific lyrics, style, and key
    • SoundBetter has genuinely professional session vocalists

    Cons

    • Not instant — turnaround is days to weeks
    • Quality varies widely on Fiverr (check reviews carefully)
    • More expensive than buying pre-made acapellas

    Best for: Producers who need a specific custom performance and are willing to wait and pay more for it.

    07

    Looperman

    Looperman is a free, community-driven platform where producers and vocalists upload loops, beats, and acapellas. It's been around for years, and if you've ever searched for free acapellas, you've probably ended up here.

    The good news: it's completely free. The community includes some talented vocalists who upload original recordings under Creative Commons or similar licenses. If you're on a tight budget, Looperman is a legitimate option.

    The bad news: quality control is nonexistent. There's no curation. Some uploads are clean studio recordings, others are noisy bedroom takes with room reflections baked in. Licensing terms vary per upload — and some uploads are ripped from commercial releases without authorization. You need to read the license on every single download and use your ears to judge quality.

    Pricing: Free.

    Pros

    • Completely free
    • Active community with regular uploads
    • Some genuinely talented vocalists contribute original work

    Cons

    • No quality control — you have to sift through a lot
    • Licensing varies per upload and isn't always reliable
    • Limited metadata (key, BPM often missing or wrong)

    Best for: Producers on a zero budget who are willing to dig through a lot of content to find usable vocals.

    All 7 Platforms Compared

    Here's how all seven stack up side by side.

    Platform Focus Catalog Pricing Cover Vocals Exclusives Best For
    The Vocal Market Vocals only 500+ (curated) Per-vocal ($10-50+) Yes Yes Curated, release-ready vocals
    Vocalfy Vocals Large Per-vocal + subscription Limited Limited Volume browsing
    Voclio Vocals Growing Per-vocal No No Clean UX, quality focus
    Splice All samples 100M+ (vocals = tiny fraction) Subscription ($9.99+/mo) No No Existing subscribers
    Loopmasters All samples Large (vocal packs = subset) Per-pack + Loopcloud sub No No Vocal packs + other samples
    Fiverr / SoundBetter Custom commissions N/A (made to order) Per-project ($30-500+) Custom only By negotiation Specific custom performances
    Looperman Free community Community uploads Free No No Zero budget

    Which Platform Should You Use?

    It depends on what you're making and where you are in the process.

    • You want a release-ready acapella with clear licensing — go with a dedicated vocal marketplace like The Vocal Market, Vocalfy, or Voclio.
    • You need a cover vocal for a remix — The Vocal Market is the only platform on this list with a dedicated cover vocals collection.
    • You want an exclusive vocal no one else can use — The Vocal Market offers exclusive purchases.
    • You already subscribe to Splice for drums and synths — check their vocal section while you're there, but manage your expectations.
    • You need a specific custom performance — commission a vocalist on SoundBetter (pro-level) or Fiverr (budget).
    • You have zero budget — Looperman is free, but verify licensing on every download and check quality with your own ears.

    Most producers end up using more than one platform. That's normal. The point is knowing which platform to reach for depending on what you need right now.

    Browse Acapellas on The Vocal Market

    200+ curated vocals from real vocalists. Filter by genre, key, BPM, and style. Preview everything. Buy only what you need — no subscription required.

    Browse the Catalog

    Looking for cover vocals? Browse the cover vocals collection

    New to buying acapellas? Read our complete guide to finding acapellas

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    Access our library of premium vocals and take your productions to the next level.

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