With TikTok trending audio going viral every day, many users want to know how to find a song from TikTok so they can add it to playlists, stream it on music apps, or simply enjoy the full version. Whether the song is popular, obscure, sped-up, slowed, or remixed, there are several reliable methods to identify it quickly.
This guide covers all the ways to find music from TikTok—including built-in TikTok tools, third-party apps, shortcuts, and advanced methods when the song isn’t easily recognizable.
- Check the TikTok Sound Label on the Video
The easiest way to find a song is directly on the video.
Steps:
- Open the TikTok video.
- Look at the bottom-left corner where the sound name appears.
- Tap the sound label.
- TikTok will show:
- The original audio name
- Other videos using the same sound
- Whether it’s an official song or user-generated audio
If it’s a real song, TikTok usually links to the official track.
- Use TikTok’s Built-In “Shazam” Integration (Identify Sound)
TikTok allows song recognition within the app.
How to use it:
- Tap the Search bar inside TikTok.
- Tap “Search by sound” or “Identify that song”.
- Let the app listen to the audio.
- TikTok will show the closest match.
This works well for original tracks but may struggle with edits or remixes.
- Use Song Recognition Apps (Shazam, SoundHound, Musixmatch)
If TikTok can’t identify it, use a third-party app.
Method A: Using Shazam
- Open Shazam.
- Tap the Shazam button.
- Play the TikTok video on another device (or use split-screen).
- Let Shazam detect the audio.
Shazam is extremely good with mainstream and older songs.
Method B: Using SoundHound
This works well with humming or acapella songs.
Method C: Using Musixmatch
Great for identifying songs through the lyrics on screen.
- Look at the Comments Section
TikTok users often help each other identify songs.
Search for comments like:
- “What’s the name of the song?”
- “Song?”
- “Track?”
Usually someone has replied with the title and artist.
- Use the TikTok Search Bar With Keywords
If you know part of the lyrics, type them into the TikTok search bar.
Example:
- “lyrics ‘don’t leave me here alone’ TikTok song”
- “sped up song TikTok cry”
TikTok’s algorithm is extremely good at matching lyric fragments.
- Use Google to Search Lyrics
If you can hear some words, type them into Google with quotation marks:
Example:
“all my friends are wasted” TikTok song
Google will return the exact track.
- Check Reposted Audio on YouTube
Many users upload:
- TikTok mixes
- Slowed + reverb versions
- Sped up versions
Search on YouTube:
- “TikTok trend song”
- “TikTok viral sound”
- “lyrics + TikTok”
YouTube often shows the full song even when TikTok uses a remix.
- Use the TikTok Sound Page to View the Original Audio
Sometimes the sound label isn’t the real song.
If the audio page says:
- “original sound – @username”
…it may be an edit.
In that case:
- Go to the sound page.
- Scroll through the videos.
- Look for users asking “What’s the song?”
- Look for comments from the creator revealing the title.
Many editors credit the original track.
- Follow the Audio to Streaming Platforms
When TikTok recognizes a real song, it sometimes links to:
- Spotify
- Apple Music
- YouTube Music
Just tap the “Add to music app” option if visible.
- Ask the TikTok Creator Directly
If all else fails:
- Comment politely asking for the song name.
- Creators usually respond or update the sound label.
- Some may pin the song name for clarity.
Why TikTok Sometimes Hides the Song Name
TikTok may not show the real track because:
- The sound is a remix not owned by the artist
- Copyright restrictions block official audio
- The uploader used “original sound” instead of linking the track
- The audio is from a movie, show, or game soundtrack
In these cases, recognition apps or lyric searches work best.
ALSO READ: How to edit sound on TikTok after posting
