Discord

What changed with Jockie Music in 2026

Jockie Music has spent the last three years sitting at the top of every “best Discord music bot” list because the architecture is genuinely clever. Six separate bot accounts (Jockie 1 through Jockie 6) can run in one server, so six voice channels can play different music at the same time. That feature alone replaced Rythm for most large communities. The catch in 2026 is that Jockie 2 through Jockie 6 now require Premium ($5.99 per month per server), the free queue length has tightened, and several previously free conveniences sit behind paywalls or rate limits.

We tested seven Jockie Music alternatives to find which Discord music bots still cover the basics for free, which premium options come in cheaper, and which suit a server that already pays for a moderation bot. The picks below are for server admins who need music running tonight without committing $5.99 every month forever.

Quick comparison

BotBest forFree planPaid planStandout feature
FredBoatNo-paywall basicsYes, full feature setNoneFree forever, no premium gating
ChipCheapest premiumYes, capped queues$2.99/monthLowest paid tier for filters and EQ
TempoAudio uptimeYes, with limits$4.99/monthDedicated Lavalink fleet for stable streams
VexeraMusic plus moderationYes$4.99/monthSound effects and light moderation in one bot
MEE6Existing MEE6 serversYes, 25-track cap$11.95/monthMusic inside a wider moderation suite
Green-botIndie and SoundCloud focusYes~$5/monthBandcamp and SoundCloud catalog beyond Spotify
ProbotSpotify-first serversYes$4.99/monthNative Spotify URL playback with Discord embed

Why people leave Jockie Music

A few patterns keep coming up in the threads where Jockie users compare notes:

None of this makes Jockie a bad bot. It just means smaller servers, free-tier holdouts, and anyone allergic to monthly subscriptions have reasons to look elsewhere.

The Jockie Music alternatives

1. FredBoat, best free-forever Jockie Music alternative

FredBoat is the open-source Discord music bot that has stayed free since 2016. There is no premium tier, no queue cap on free playback, and no upsell at the end of a song. The bot pulls from Spotify, SoundCloud, Bandcamp, Twitch, and direct file URLs, with Spotify links resolved through the source layer.

The feature shelf is narrower than Jockie’s. There is no multi-bot architecture, no built-in 24/7 mode, and lyrics features are basic. But for a small server that needs queue, skip, pause, shuffle, repeat, and volume, FredBoat covers Jockie’s free tier and then some.

Where it falls short: Public-host reliability dropped after the YouTube DMCA wave. Peak-hour stalls happen, especially during European prime time. There is no recommendation engine, no auto-DJ, and no multi-room playback.

Pricing:

Migrating from Jockie: Drop FredBoat into the server, give it the voice permissions Jockie had, and rebrief moderators on the ;; prefix. Spotify playlist URLs queue the same way.

Add to server: fredboat.com

Bottom line: Pick FredBoat if you want a Discord music bot that does the basics for free and you can live with the occasional outage.

2. Chip, best cheap premium Jockie Music alternative

Chip is a music-first Discord bot built on a Lavalink fleet the team has been scaling since 2019. The free tier is generous (queue cap higher than Jockie’s free plan), and Premium runs at $2.99 per month per server, which is the lowest paid tier among serious music bots.

Sources include Spotify, SoundCloud, Apple Music (via metadata resolution), and direct URLs. Premium unlocks a 16-band EQ, audio filters (bass boost, nightcore, vaporwave), skip-vote settings, and longer queues. The slash-command interface maps cleanly to Jockie’s syntax.

Where it falls short: No multi-bot architecture. The web dashboard is functional but feels older than Jockie’s. Some advanced effects show up first on Jockie or Vexera before reaching Chip.

Pricing:

Migrating from Jockie: Slash commands carry over directly. Re-queue saved Spotify playlists by URL.

Add to server: chipbot.gg

Bottom line: Pick Chip if you want a paid Discord music bot at the lowest possible price and one voice channel of music is enough.

3. Tempo, best for audio uptime

Tempo runs dedicated Lavalink nodes across multiple regions, which keeps the audio path short and the dropouts rare. The team has built a reputation on uptime that beats most public music bots in the post-DMCA era. Sources include Spotify, Apple Music, Deezer, SoundCloud, and direct URLs, with YouTube intentionally left out.

The feature surface is intentionally tight: queue, skip, pause, shuffle, loop, autoplay, and a clean now-playing embed with reaction controls. Premium unlocks 24/7 voice mode, SponsorBlock-style skips, advanced audio effects, and longer queues.

Where it falls short: No multi-bot architecture. Smaller community than Jockie, which means fewer tutorial videos and walkthroughs. No native YouTube source, so a track that only exists on YouTube will not play.

Pricing:

Migrating from Jockie: Slash commands are similar enough that members pick them up immediately. Spotify playlists re-queue by URL.

Add to server: tempobot.net

Bottom line: Pick Tempo if audio reliability is the single most important factor and you can route around YouTube-only tracks.

4. Vexera, best for music plus moderation

Vexera ships music inside a wider bot that also handles welcome messages, light moderation, and voice-channel sound effects. For servers that ran Jockie alongside Carl-bot or a similar moderation bot, Vexera consolidates the stack into a single role and a single set of permissions.

Audio comes from YouTube, Spotify, SoundCloud, and Twitch. Premium unlocks filters (bass boost, 8D, nightcore, vaporwave, karaoke), priority audio, longer queues, and 24/7 voice. The web dashboard is one of the cleaner ones in the category.

Where it falls short: “Everything in one bot” means each subsystem is shallower than a dedicated tool. Moderation is fine for small servers but does not replace Carl-bot or Wick. Music quality is solid but the feature shelf is narrower than Jockie’s premium tier.

Pricing:

Migrating from Jockie: Slash commands map cleanly. Reset server-wide settings in Vexera’s web dashboard before going live.

Add to server: vexera.io

Bottom line: Pick Vexera for small-to-mid servers that want music plus a light utility layer in one place.

5. MEE6, best if you already pay for MEE6

MEE6 is best known as the moderation and leveling bot most large servers already run. The music module was rebuilt after Rythm’s shutdown and is now a real feature inside the broader MEE6 product. For servers that pay MEE6 Premium for leveling, music comes included.

Audio comes from YouTube, Spotify, SoundCloud, and Deezer. The configuration lives in the MEE6 dashboard, which most admins already keep open in another tab. Free-tier music has tight queue caps (25 tracks) and no 24/7 mode.

Where it falls short: Premium is the most expensive on this list because it bundles MEE6’s wider feature set. Music-only users pay for moderation, leveling, and welcome flows they may not need. Free-tier music is too capped for any sustained listening.

Pricing:

Migrating from Jockie: MEE6 is probably already in the server. Enable the music plugin in the dashboard, assign voice permissions, and brief moderators on the new commands.

Add to server: mee6.xyz

Bottom line: Pick MEE6 if you already pay for it and want one less bot in the role list.

6. Green-bot, best for indie and SoundCloud servers

Green-bot indexes a wide pool of indie creators on SoundCloud, Bandcamp, and smaller catalogs, then layers Spotify and Apple Music on top. The default search behaviour surfaces tracks Jockie tends to miss because the major-label catalogs dominate Jockie’s results. For a lo-fi server, vaporwave channel, or indie-rock community, the difference shows up in the first few queue suggestions.

The bot covers standard queue, skip, pause, shuffle, loop, and a small set of audio filters. Slash commands and the web dashboard are both clean enough, even if neither matches Jockie’s polish.

Where it falls short: Catalog coverage misses recent mainstream pop and any major-label exclusive that ships Apple Music or Spotify only. The bot is slower to load tracks than Jockie or Tempo. The community is smaller, so support relies on the official Discord rather than third-party guides.

Pricing:

Migrating from Jockie: No carryover. Re-add Spotify playlists by link if you want a familiar starting queue.

Add to server: green-bot.app

Bottom line: Pick Green-bot when your server is built around indie or SoundCloud tracks Jockie keeps missing.

7. Probot, best for Spotify-first communities

Probot is the German-originated Discord bot that includes a music module alongside moderation, welcomes, and member tracking. The music side leans heavily on Spotify integration, with native Spotify URL playback and Discord embeds that show track artwork from the Spotify catalog.

Sources include Spotify, SoundCloud, and direct URLs. The interface is slash-command based, the dashboard is web-based, and the German developer community keeps the bot stable in EU evening hours when some US-hosted alternatives stutter.

Where it falls short: Feature shelf is narrower than Jockie’s premium tier. No multi-bot architecture. Documentation is sometimes German-first, which can slow troubleshooting for English-only admins.

Pricing:

Migrating from Jockie: Slash commands map cleanly. Re-queue Spotify playlists by URL.

Add to server: probot.io

Bottom line: Pick Probot if your server is Spotify-first and you want music plus moderation under one bot.

How to choose

The right Jockie Music alternative depends on what you actually used Jockie for. A few opinionated picks for the common cases:

Stay on Jockie Music if you genuinely use multi-bot voice channels (different music in different rooms at the same time). That feature is what Jockie’s Premium tier exists to sell, and no public bot in 2026 matches it. If you only ever ran one Jockie bot in one voice channel, you are paying $5.99 a month for queue length and 24/7 mode that other bots include at lower prices.

FAQ

What is the best free Jockie Music alternative? FredBoat. It has no paid tier, no premium gating, and the same basic queue commands. Tempo and Chip both have generous free plans, but FredBoat is the only one with no upsell at all.

Why did Jockie 2 through 6 become paid? Running six bot accounts per server is six times the API overhead and hosting cost. Jockie’s team moved the multi-bot feature to Premium to fund the dedicated audio infrastructure that keeps the bots stable.

Can I import my Jockie Music queues to another bot? No. Bot-to-bot data does not transfer between Discord music bots. The fastest workflow is to save your queues as Spotify or YouTube playlists, then queue those playlists by URL in the new bot.

Is Jockie Music vs FredBoat about price or features? Both. FredBoat is free with a narrower feature set. Jockie costs $5.99 per month per server for multi-bot, longer queues, and 24/7 voice. For one voice channel of music, FredBoat covers what you need.

What is the cheapest Jockie Music alternative with filters and EQ? Chip at $2.99 per month per server. It is roughly half of Jockie’s Premium price and includes a 16-band EQ, bass boost, nightcore, and vaporwave filters.

Does any free bot still offer 24/7 voice mode? FredBoat keeps a basic always-on behaviour when the voice channel has activity. True 24/7 mode (the bot stays connected through quiet stretches) is paid on Jockie, Tempo, Vexera, and Chip. The only way to get it free is to self-host a bot like JMusicBot or Aiode.

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