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Libsyn

Also analyzed in: 2 other industries
Analyzed: 2026-04-23
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
62
/ 100
Strong

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
73
/ 100
Product-Strong

What the model believes about Libsyn without web search.

LLM Authority?
47
/ 100
Present

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
71
/ 100
Specialty-Recall

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Libsyn from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
73/100
Product-Strong
Quality?
0.67
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.72
Top associations for Libsyn
dated interface 4 dated interface 3 reliable podcast hosting 3 long track record in podcast hosting 2 podcast hosting platform 2 podcast monetization support 2 podcast distribution service 2 reliable distribution to major platforms 2 distributes to Spotify 2 distributes to Apple Podcasts 2 solid analytics 2 solid analytics 2 long track record in podcast hosting 2 less attractive pricing 2 monetization tools 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
stores podcast audio files 4 generates RSS feeds 2 podcast hosting platform 2 provides analytics 2 publishing tools for podcasts 1 supports monetization features 1 generates podcast feeds 1 stores audio files 1 includes publishing tools 1 offers episode management tools 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Libsyn is firmly in the model's "podcast hosting platform" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Libsyn known for?
Libsyn is best known as a podcast hosting and distribution platform. It helps creators publish, manage, and distribute podcasts, along with analytics and monetization tools.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Libsyn known for?
Libsyn is best known as a podcast hosting and distribution platform. It provides tools for uploading, publishing, managing, monetizing, and distributing podcasts to apps and directories.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
47/100
Present
Recall mode (no web)?
46

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
48

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best podcast hosting platforms for interview podcasts? #4 not mentioned
discovery Which podcast hosting platform is best for a solo show? #4 not mentioned
discovery What are the best podcast hosting platforms for video podcasts? not mentioned #2
discovery What podcast hosting platforms work well for business podcasts? #1 #4
discovery What are the best podcast hosting platforms for a hobby podcast? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which podcast hosting platforms are good for monetizing a show? #2 #2
discovery What are the best podcast hosting platforms for analytics and listener insights? #5 #3
discovery What podcast hosting platform is best for multiple shows? #4 #4
discovery What are the best podcast hosting platforms for a new podcast network? #1 #2
discovery Which podcast hosting platforms are best for artists and musicians? #6 #4
discovery What are the best podcast hosting platforms for private podcasts? #6 not mentioned
discovery What podcast hosting platform is best for team collaboration? #4 not mentioned
discovery What are the best podcast hosting platforms for teachers and educators? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which podcast hosting platforms are best for nonprofits? not mentioned #6
discovery What are the best podcast hosting platforms for mobile recording workflows? #4 #3
discovery What podcast hosting platform is best for a seasonal podcast? #4 #4
discovery Which podcast hosting platforms are best for educational series with episodes and transcripts? not mentioned #5
discovery What are the best podcast hosting platforms for ad-supported podcasts? #2 #1
discovery What podcast hosting platform is best for fast RSS distribution? #3 not mentioned
discovery What are the best podcast hosting platforms for growing an audience? #4 #6
comparison What are the best alternatives to a leading podcast hosting platform? #2 #3
comparison Which podcast hosting platform is better for monetization versus analytics? #6 #3
comparison What are the best alternatives to a popular podcast hosting service? #2 #7
comparison Which podcast hosting platform is better for beginners or advanced creators? #5 #3
comparison What are the best alternatives to a podcast platform with strong analytics? #6 #3
comparison How do podcast hosting platforms compare for distribution features? #2 #3
comparison Which podcast hosting platform is better for free plans versus paid plans? #6 #4
comparison What are the best alternatives to a podcast hosting platform with monetization tools? #2 #4
comparison Which podcast hosting platform is better for small teams versus solo creators? #5 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a podcast hosting service with easy setup? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I choose a podcast hosting platform for RSS distribution? #2 #3
problem How do I get my podcast on all major listening apps? #2 #2
problem How do I host my podcast files and generate an RSS feed? #5 not mentioned
problem How do I track podcast downloads and listener analytics? #1 #2
problem How do I monetize a podcast with ads or subscriptions? #4 not mentioned
problem How do I start a podcast without managing my own server? #6 #3
problem How do I move my podcast to a new hosting platform? #3 #1
problem How do I set up a private podcast for members or employees? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I keep my podcast feed from breaking when I change hosts? #1 not mentioned
problem How do I publish podcast episodes automatically to multiple directories? #2 #2
transactional What is the pricing for podcast hosting platforms? #6 #3
transactional Are there free podcast hosting platforms? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest podcast hosting platform? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do podcast hosting platforms offer a free trial? not mentioned #3
transactional What podcast hosting platforms have unlimited storage? #6 not mentioned
transactional How much does podcast hosting cost per month? #6 #4
transactional Which podcast hosting platforms have the best value? #6 #2
transactional What podcast hosting platform has the best paid plan? #4 not mentioned
transactional Are there podcast hosting platforms with no setup fee? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What podcast hosting platforms include monetization tools in the price? #5 not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: What are the best podcast hosting platforms for interview podcasts? · discovery · recall mode
For interview podcasts, the best hosting platforms are usually the ones with **easy remote recording integrations, strong analytics, reliable distribution, and simple workflow**. ### Top picks **1. Buzzsprout** Best overall for most interview podcasts. - Very easy to use - Great distribution to Spotify/Apple Podcasts - Helpful analytics - Built-in tools like episode transcription and promo clips **2. Captivate** Best for growth-focused podcasters. - Excellent audience analytics - Strong marketing tools - Unlimited podcasts on many plans - Good for interview shows that want to scale **3. Transistor** Best for professionals and networks. - Clean, reliable hosting - Great for multiple shows - Solid private podcast options - Easy to manage a polished interview brand **4. Libsyn** Best for long-running, serious podcasters. - Very established hosting platform - Strong distribution options - Reliable and feature-rich - Good if you want a proven industry standard **5. Spotify for Creators (formerly Anchor)** Best free option for beginners. - Free hosting - Simple to start - Easy Spotify integration - Less powerful than paid platforms for advanced analytics and growth ### Best if you record interviews remotely If you want a platform that helps with recording too, consider: - **Riverside** – best for high-quality remote interviews - **Zencastr** – good for easy guest recording - **SquadCast** – another strong interview-recording option ### My quick recommendation - **Best overall:** Buzzsprout - **Best for growth:** Captivate - **Best free:** Spotify for Creators - **Best recording + hosting workflow:** Riverside If you want, I can also give you the **best platform based on your budget** or **compare Buzzsprout vs Captivate vs Transistor**.
Prompt: Which podcast hosting platform is best for a solo show? · discovery · recall mode
For a **solo show**, the best all-around choice is usually **Buzzsprout**. ### Why Buzzsprout is a great fit - Very easy to use - Clean dashboard and analytics - Great for beginners and one-person shows - Solid distribution to Apple Podcasts, Spotify, etc. - Good built-in tools for episode hosting and publishing ### Good alternatives - **Captivate** — best if you want more growth/marketing features and plan to scale - **Transistor** — great if you want multiple shows or a more polished pro setup - **Libsyn** — strong long-term choice, but the interface feels a bit dated - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free and simple, but less flexible if you want to grow seriously ### My quick recommendation - **Best overall for a solo creator:** **Buzzsprout** - **Best for growth tools:** **Captivate** - **Best free option:** **Spotify for Podcasters** If you want, I can also give you the **best platform by budget** or **best for monetization**.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
71/100
Specialty-Recall
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for beginners? 720 3/5 5, 4, 4
What are the top podcast hosting platforms for creators? 40 5/5 2, 2, 2, 3, 5
Which podcast hosting platform is most recommended? 0 5/5 2, 4, 2, 3, 4
What are popular podcast hosting options right now? 0 5/5 3, 2, 3, 1, 2
What is the best podcast hosting platform for independent podcasters? 0 5/5 4, 5, 4, 3, 4
Which podcast hosting platforms are worth using? 0 5/5 5, 4, 2, 5, 4
What are the best podcast hosting services for new shows? 260 3/5 6, 5, 5
What podcast hosting platform should I use? 0 4/5 3, 2, 4, 5
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for small podcasts? 0 4/5 5, 5, 8, 4
What are the top-rated podcast hosting services? 0 5/5 2, 2, 5, 4, 4
Which podcast hosting platforms have the best features? 0 5/5 2, 4, 3, 5, 2
What are the most reliable podcast hosting platforms? 0 5/5 1, 2, 1, 1, 1
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for creators? 0 5/5 2, 4, 3, 2, 2
What podcast hosting options do most people use? 10 5/5 3, 3, 3, 3, 3
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for launching a show? 0 5/5 5, 5, 3, 6, 2
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the best podcast hosting platforms for beginners? (no web search)
For beginners, the best podcast hosting platforms are usually the ones that are **easy to set up, affordable, and distribute automatically**. ### Best overall for beginners **Buzzsprout** - Very beginner-friendly dashboard - Easy publishing and analytics - Great support and onboarding - Good if you want a simple “just works” experience ### Best free option **Spotify for Podcasters** - Free hosting - Easy to start fast - Good if you mainly want to publish without upfront cost - Best for hobby podcasters and testing the waters ### Best for simple monetization **Podbean** - Easy to use - Built-in monetization options - Good value for beginners who may want to grow into ads or premium content ### Best for clean, professional branding **Transistor** - Very polished and simple - Great for multiple shows - Good analytics and private podcast support - Slightly more advanced, but still beginner-friendly ### Best long-term classic choice **Libsyn** - One of the oldest and most trusted hosts - Solid reliability and distribution - Interface is less modern, but it’s dependable ## My quick recommendation - **Most beginners:** **Buzzsprout** - **Free starter option:** **Spotify for Podcasters** - **If you want monetization early:** **Podbean** If you want, I can also give you the **best option based on your budget** or **a side-by-side comparison table**.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What are the best podcast hosting platforms for beginners? (no web search)
For beginners, the best podcast hosting platforms are usually the ones that are easy to set up, include distribution to major apps, and don’t overwhelm you with tech. ### Best overall for beginners **Buzzsprout** - Super easy to use - Clean dashboard, great analytics - Helps distribute to Spotify, Apple Podcasts, etc. - Good if you want a simple, polished start ### Best free/cheap beginner option **Spotify for Creators** - Free to use - Easy publishing and Spotify integration - Good for first-time podcasters testing the waters - Best if you want minimal upfront cost ### Best if you want simple + all-in-one **Captivate** - Beginner-friendly but more powerful as you grow - Good tools for growth, websites, and monetization - Nice balance of simplicity and features ### Best for WordPress users **Libsyn** - One of the oldest podcast hosts - Reliable and widely trusted - A bit less modern-looking, but solid - Good if you want long-term stability ### Best budget option **Podbean** - Affordable plans - Easy to use - Includes monetization options - Good for creators who want a lot without paying much ### Best for creators who want a website too **Transistor** - Very clean interface - Great for multiple shows - Strong website and RSS features - Slightly more advanced, but still beginner-friendly ## My top picks - **Absolute beginner:** Buzzsprout - **Free starter:** Spotify for Creators - **Best budget:** Podbean - **Best long-term growth:** Captivate If you want, I can also give you a **“best podcast host by budget”** list or help you choose based on your goals.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Also analyzed in Libsyn in 2 other industries

This report focuses on Podcast Hosting Platforms because that is where Libsyn scores highest. The model also evaluates it against the industries below, with their own prompts and competitor sets. Click any industry for its full leaderboard.

What to do next Recommendations for Libsyn

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

Identify and shore up oscillating differentiators

Core TOM is strong. Watch for specific differentiators (slogans, signature products) that appear in only some iterations. Push those into training-data-crawled headlines.

Maintain / refine TOM

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 23, 2026 at 5:52 AM

All 210 AI responses for Libsyn

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "Libsyn" in the podcast hosting platform category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":7,"justification":"I know Libsyn as a long-running podcast hosting platform and am familiar with its core hosting/distribution offering and general market position, but not with all current pricing or feature details."}
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Libsyn as a long-running podcast hosting platform and am familiar with its core hosting, distribution, and monetization offerings, though not every current pricing detail or niche feature." }
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Libsyn well as a long-running podcast hosting platform and can identify its core hosting/distribution offerings and general market position, though I’m less certain on current pricing and feature specifics." }
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Libsyn well as a longstanding podcast hosting and distribution platform, including its core hosting, publishing, analytics, and monetization offerings, but not every current pricing or feature detail." }
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":8,"justification":"I know Libsyn well as an established podcast hosting and monetization platform, including its core hosting, distribution, analytics, and monetization offerings, though not every current pricing detail."}
What is Libsyn known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is best known as a podcast hosting and distribution platform. It helps creators publish, manage, and distribute podcasts, along with analytics and monetization tools.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is best known as a podcast hosting and distribution platform. It provides tools for uploading, publishing, managing, monetizing, and distributing podcasts to apps and directories.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is known for podcast hosting and distribution services. It helps podcasters store, publish, and distribute audio episodes to platforms like Apple Podcasts and Spotify, and also offers analytics and monetization tools.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is best known as a podcast hosting and distribution platform. It helps creators publish, manage, monetize, and distribute podcasts to directories like Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is best known as one of the original podcast hosting and distribution platforms. It helps creators host, publish, and monetize podcasts.
What are Libsyn's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn’s main strengths are its long track record in podcast hosting, reliable distribution to major platforms, solid analytics, and tools for creators who want a relatively straightforward, podcast-focused service. It’s also known for having features that suit serious podcasters and businesses, like monetization and scalable hosting. Its main weaknesses are that the interface and workflow can feel dated compared with newer competitors, pricing can be less attractive for smaller creators, and some users find the setup less intuitive. It’s strong on core hosting, but not always the most polished or modern experience.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn’s main strengths are its long track record in podcast hosting, reliable distribution to major platforms, solid analytics, and strong tools for monetization and publishing. It’s often seen as a dependable, feature-rich option for serious podcasters. Main weaknesses: the interface can feel dated, the pricing can be less attractive for beginners, and some users find newer competitors easier to use or more modern in workflow and design. It can also feel more oriented toward established podcasters than casual creators.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn’s main strengths are its long track record in podcast hosting, reliable distribution, strong analytics, monetization options, and tools aimed at established podcasters and networks. It’s also known for being a stable, podcast-focused platform with good support for RSS-based publishing. Its main weaknesses are that the interface can feel dated or less intuitive than newer competitors, pricing can be less attractive for beginners, and some users find its workflow and design less modern or flexible than other podcast hosting services. It’s often better for serious podcasters than for casual creators looking for the simplest experience.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn’s main strengths are its long track record in podcast hosting, reliable RSS/distribution tools, solid analytics, and broad integrations with podcast apps and monetization options. It’s also well-known for stability and for serving serious podcasters and networks. Main weaknesses: the interface can feel dated compared with newer competitors, pricing may seem less competitive for some users, and the platform can feel less beginner-friendly or less visually polished than modern all-in-one podcast tools.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn’s main strengths are its long track record, reliable podcast hosting, strong distribution tools, and solid analytics/monetization features for serious podcasters. It’s well-known for stability, RSS control, and supporting multiple shows and workflows. Its main weaknesses are that the interface can feel dated, pricing may be less attractive than some newer competitors, and it can be less intuitive for beginners. It also may not feel as modern or creator-friendly as some newer all-in-one podcast platforms.
Who should use Libsyn? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is best for podcasters who want a long-standing, reliable hosting platform with solid distribution, analytics, and monetization tools. It’s a good fit for solo creators, small businesses, and established shows that care more about stability and podcast-specific features than a flashy interface. People should avoid Libsyn if they want the most modern, beginner-friendly UI, heavy website-building features, or an all-in-one creator platform with lots of visual polish. It may also be a poor fit for someone who just wants the cheapest possible option or very simple hobby hosting with minimal features.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is best for podcasters who want reliable, straightforward podcast hosting with solid distribution, analytics, and monetization options—especially independent creators, agencies, and businesses that care more about stability than flashy extras. Should use Libsyn: - Podcasters who want a proven, long-running hosting platform - Creators who need dependable RSS distribution and hosting - People who want simple publishing and solid analytics - Businesses/brands that need a professional podcast setup - Users who may want monetization tools or private podcasting options Should avoid Libsyn: - Beginners who want the most modern, easiest all-in-one interface - Creators looking for lots of built-in marketing/website features - People who want a very polished, highly visual platform experience - Podcasters on a very tight budget who need the cheapest possible option In short: choose Libsyn if you value reliability and podcast-first features; skip it if you want the flashiest, most beginner-friendly, or most design-heavy platform.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is best for podcasters who want a long-established, reliable hosting platform with solid distribution tools, detailed stats, and a no-frills workflow—especially independent creators, agencies, and businesses that care more about stability than flashy extras. People who should avoid it: beginners who want the simplest, most modern UI; creators who need lots of built-in marketing, video, or website features; and anyone looking for the cheapest possible option or a very sleek all-in-one creator suite.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is best for podcasters who want reliable, long-running hosting, solid distribution tools, and straightforward podcast publishing without needing a fancy all-in-one marketing suite. It’s a good fit for solo creators, businesses, and established shows that care most about dependable RSS hosting, analytics, and episode delivery. People who may want to avoid it are those who need a very modern, highly polished user experience, heavy built-in website/marketing automation, or the lowest-cost option for a brand-new hobby show. If you want lots of design extras, advanced growth tools, or a very simple beginner interface, other platforms may suit you better.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is best for podcasters who want a reliable, established hosting platform, especially solo creators, small businesses, and teams that care more about distribution, analytics, and monetization than flashy extras. Who should use it: - Podcast creators who want dependable hosting - Businesses using podcasts for marketing or internal content - Users who want RSS distribution to major platforms - People who value stable analytics and monetization tools - Creators who prefer a long-standing, podcast-focused service Who should avoid it: - Beginners who want the simplest, most modern all-in-one creator experience - Video-first creators - People looking for a very generous free plan - Users who need advanced website building or heavy customization built in - Creators who only need occasional audio storage and little else
How does Libsyn compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is a long-running, reliable podcast hosting platform that’s especially strong for established podcasters who value stability, distribution tools, and monetization options. Compared with competitors: - Spotify for Podcasters: easier and free, but less customizable and less focused on advanced hosting/analytics. - Buzzsprout: generally more beginner-friendly with a cleaner interface, but Libsyn tends to be stronger for power users and legacy shows. - Podbean: often more feature-rich for monetization and live streaming; Libsyn is usually viewed as more traditional and distribution-focused. - Captivate: newer, more modern UX and growth tools; Libsyn feels more proven but less polished. - Transistor: excellent for teams and multi-show management; Libsyn is better known for broad compatibility and long-term stability. - Acast: stronger on ad marketplace and monetization in some regions; Libsyn is more neutral and hosting-first. Overall, Libsyn’s main strengths are credibility, dependable hosting, detailed control, and industry familiarity. Its main weaknesses are that the interface can feel older and some competitors are easier for beginners or offer more modern growth features.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is one of the oldest podcast hosting platforms, and it’s usually seen as a "reliable, enterprise-ish" option rather than the most beginner-friendly. Compared with main competitors: - Buzzsprout: easier for beginners, cleaner UI, better onboarding; Libsyn is more established and often better for long-term, power-user workflows. - Podbean: broader all-in-one features and live streaming options; Libsyn is stronger on straightforward, classic podcast hosting and distribution. - Transistor: more modern analytics and multi-show management; Libsyn is more mature and recognized, but feels less polished. - Spotify for Podcasters: free and simple; Libsyn is a paid, more professional hosting solution with more control and fewer platform ties. - Captivate: more creator-focused growth tools; Libsyn is usually chosen for stability, history, and robust publishing rather than marketing features. - Acast: better for monetization and network-style operations; Libsyn is less ad-tech-heavy and more hosting-centric. Bottom line: Libsyn is best if you want a proven, dependable host with strong distribution and don’t mind a more traditional interface. If you want the easiest setup or the most modern creator tools, competitors like Buzzsprout or Transistor often feel better.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is one of the oldest podcast hosting platforms, and it’s generally seen as a reliable, no-frills choice for serious podcasters. Compared with main competitors: - Buzzsprout: usually easier for beginners, with a cleaner UI and simpler setup. Libsyn is more feature-heavy and traditionally better for advanced control. - Podbean: often stronger on built-in monetization and live streaming/community features. Libsyn is more about hosting stability and distribution. - Captivate: tends to offer a more modern interface and growth-focused tools. Libsyn feels more established but less modern. - Spotify for Creators (Anchor): free and very easy to use, but less customizable and less “pro” in feel than Libsyn. - Transistor: strong for teams and multiple shows, with a polished interface. Libsyn is more legacy/professional, but less sleek. Overall: Libsyn is best for podcasters who want dependable hosting, solid distribution, and more control. It’s less beginner-friendly and less modern-looking than many newer competitors.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is one of the oldest podcast hosting platforms, and it’s often compared with Buzzsprout, Podbean, Captivate, Transistor, and Anchor/Spotify for Podcasters. Quick take: - Strengths: very reliable hosting, strong publishing/distribution tools, good monetization options, solid analytics, and a long track record. - Weaknesses: its interface and workflow can feel less modern and less intuitive than newer competitors. Compared with others: - Buzzsprout: usually easier for beginners and more polished; Libsyn is often stronger for established podcasters who want depth and flexibility. - Podbean: similar all-in-one style, with strong monetization; Libsyn is often seen as more “pro” and stable, while Podbean can feel more feature-packed for the price. - Captivate / Transistor: newer, cleaner, and more creator-friendly; Libsyn tends to win on legacy reliability and advanced distribution, but loses on UX. - Spotify for Podcasters (Anchor): free and very easy to use, but less flexible and less independent than Libsyn. Bottom line: Libsyn is best for serious podcasters who value reliability and control over a slick modern interface. It’s less ideal if you want the easiest or most visually polished platform.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Libsyn is one of the oldest podcast hosting platforms and is generally seen as a solid, established option rather than the flashiest one. Compared with main competitors: - Buzzsprout: usually considered easier for beginners, with a more modern interface; Libsyn tends to feel more “pro” and feature-rich but less polished. - Podbean: often offers more bundled monetization and live-streaming/community features; Libsyn is more focused on reliable hosting and distribution. - Transistor: stronger for multi-show networks and cleaner analytics; Libsyn is more traditional and broad-purpose. - Spotify for Podcasters: free and very simple, but less robust for advanced publishing and ownership-focused workflows; Libsyn is better for serious podcast operations. - Captivate: often praised for creator-friendly growth tools and marketing features; Libsyn is more established but can feel less intuitive. Overall: Libsyn is best if you want dependable, long-term podcast hosting with strong distribution and don’t mind an older interface. It’s less ideal if you want the easiest user experience or the most modern growth tools.
What do people typically complain about with Libsyn?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Libsyn can feel outdated and a bit clunky compared with newer podcast hosts. Common complaints include: confusing or less intuitive dashboard, dated interface, limited modern analytics/reporting, occasional upload/publishing friction, and pricing that some feel is high for the feature set. Some also mention slower support or that setup/customization can be less straightforward than expected.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that Libsyn feels a bit dated, with an interface that can be clunky or hard to navigate. Other frequent complaints are limited customization, occasional slow support responses, and pricing that some users feel is high for what they get. Some also mention upload/analytics quirks and that the platform can be less intuitive than newer podcast hosts.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that Libsyn’s interface feels dated and a bit clunky, the analytics/reporting can be harder to use than newer platforms, and setup/workflows aren’t always intuitive. Others mention occasional upload/publishing hiccups, limited customization compared with some competitors, and support or billing issues being slower than they’d like.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Libsyn’s interface feels dated and not very intuitive, especially for beginners. Other common complaints are limited analytics on lower tiers, occasional upload/publishing quirks, weak customer support response times, and pricing that can feel high compared with newer competitors. Some also dislike that storage limits and add-ons can make the total cost less predictable.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain about Libsyn’s dated interface, confusing navigation, and limited analytics compared with newer podcast hosts. Other frequent gripes are slower customer support, pricing that feels high for the features, and some workflow frustrations around episode uploads, redirects, and mobile/app management.
What is a typical podcast hosting platform known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A podcast hosting platform is typically known for storing and distributing podcast audio files, generating an RSS feed, and providing analytics, publishing tools, and sometimes monetization features.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical podcast hosting platform is known for storing and distributing podcast audio files, generating an RSS feed, and providing analytics, publishing tools, and sometimes monetization features.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical podcast hosting platform is known for storing and distributing podcast audio files, generating the RSS feed for podcast apps, and often providing analytics, episode management, and publishing tools.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical podcast hosting platform is known for storing your audio files, generating the podcast feed, distributing episodes to apps like Apple Podcasts and Spotify, and providing stats like downloads and audience analytics.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical podcast hosting platform is known for storing and distributing podcast audio files, generating RSS feeds, and providing analytics, publishing tools, and sometimes monetization features.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best podcast hosting platforms for interview podcasts? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For interview podcasts, the best hosting platforms are usually the ones with **easy remote recording integrations, strong analytics, reliable distribution, and simple workflow**. ### Top picks **1. Buzzsprout** Best overall for most interview podcasts. - Very easy to use - Great distribution to Spotify/Apple Podcasts - Helpful analytics - Built-in tools like episode transcription and promo clips **2. Captivate** Best for growth-focused podcasters. - Excellent audience analytics - Strong marketing tools - Unlimited podcasts on many plans - Good for interview shows that want to scale **3. Transistor** Best for professionals and networks. - Clean, reliable hosting - Great for multiple shows - Solid private podcast options - Easy to manage a polished interview brand **4. Libsyn** Best for long-running, serious podcasters. - Very established hosting platform - Strong distribution options - Reliable and feature-rich - Good if you want a proven industry standard **5. Spotify for Creators (formerly Anchor)** Best free option for beginners. - Free hosting - Simple to start - Easy Spotify integration - Less powerful than paid platforms for advanced analytics and growth ### Best if you record interviews remotely If you want a platform that helps with recording too, consider: - **Riverside** – best for high-quality remote interviews - **Zencastr** – good for easy guest recording - **SquadCast** – another strong interview-recording option ### My quick recommendation - **Best overall:** Buzzsprout - **Best for growth:** Captivate - **Best free:** Spotify for Creators - **Best recording + hosting workflow:** Riverside If you want, I can also give you the **best platform based on your budget** or **compare Buzzsprout vs Captivate vs Transistor**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **interview podcasts**, my short list is: - **Captivate** — best if you want **guest booking + show planning + marketing tools** in one place. Captivate says it has a fully integrated guest booking platform, workflow tools for planning and booking interviews, private podcasts, and monetization tools. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/?utm_source=openai)) - **Transistor** — best for **teams and serious analytics**. It offers unlimited team members, multiple podcasts, private/unlisted podcasts, and detailed analytics. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/features/invite-multiple-collaborators/?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — best for **simplicity and ease of use**. Buzzsprout focuses on hosting, promotion, stats, a custom podcast website, unlimited team members, and IAB-certified stats. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/features?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — best for **budget + live/interview formats**. Podbean has low starting prices, unlimited storage/bandwidth on paid plans, team roles, live streaming, and business/private podcast options. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting-pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Spotify for Creators** — best if you want **free hosting with built-in Spotify tools**. Spotify offers free hosting, audio/video uploads, analytics, comments, monetization, and Q&A/polls. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) **Best overall for interview podcasts:** - **Captivate** if you book guests often. - **Transistor** if you care most about team workflow and analytics. - **Buzzsprout** if you want the easiest setup. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **ranked top 3 by budget** or **top 3 for video interview podcasts**.
Which podcast hosting platform is best for a solo show? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For a **solo show**, the best all-around choice is usually **Buzzsprout**. ### Why Buzzsprout is a great fit - Very easy to use - Clean dashboard and analytics - Great for beginners and one-person shows - Solid distribution to Apple Podcasts, Spotify, etc. - Good built-in tools for episode hosting and publishing ### Good alternatives - **Captivate** — best if you want more growth/marketing features and plan to scale - **Transistor** — great if you want multiple shows or a more polished pro setup - **Libsyn** — strong long-term choice, but the interface feels a bit dated - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free and simple, but less flexible if you want to grow seriously ### My quick recommendation - **Best overall for a solo creator:** **Buzzsprout** - **Best for growth tools:** **Captivate** - **Best free option:** **Spotify for Podcasters** If you want, I can also give you the **best platform by budget** or **best for monetization**.
retrieval Not mentioned
**Best overall for a solo show: Buzzsprout.** It’s simple, creator-friendly, and built for indie podcasters; it also has a free start option, month-to-month billing, unlimited team members, transcripts, a podcast website, and easy distribution tools. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want **free hosting**, go with **Spotify for Creators**: it offers free hosting, unlimited storage, distribution everywhere, analytics, comments, and monetization tools. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) If you want **the best paid “all-in-one” alternative**, **Transistor** is a strong choice, with unlimited podcasts/team members, advanced analytics, a built-in website, and pricing tied to monthly downloads. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Most solo creators:** Buzzsprout - **Zero budget:** Spotify for Creators - **More advanced / scaling later:** Transistor If you want, I can narrow it down by **budget, video podcasting, monetization, or simplicity**.
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for video podcasts? discovery 50/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best podcast hosting platforms for **video podcasts**: 1. **Spotify for Creators** - Best if you want the easiest all-in-one setup - Supports video, distribution to Spotify, and solid analytics - Great for beginners and creators already targeting Spotify 2. **Captivate** - Best for growth-focused podcasters - Clean workflow, video support, strong analytics, and good monetization tools - Better if you want an independent podcast brand 3. **Buzzsprout** - Best simple, polished host for audio + video - Very beginner-friendly, good support, easy publishing - Video support is more limited than some dedicated options, but strong overall 4. **Transistor** - Best for professional teams and multiple shows - Great analytics, private podcasts, and robust hosting - Good choice if you want a serious, scalable setup 5. **RSS.com** - Best budget-friendly option with video podcast support - Easy to use and includes solid standard podcast hosting features - Good value for solo creators 6. **Podbean** - Best for monetization and live streaming - Supports video podcasts, ads, memberships, and live audio/video features - Strong option if monetization is a priority ### My quick picks - **Best overall:** Spotify for Creators - **Best for growth:** Captivate - **Best for teams/pros:** Transistor - **Best budget choice:** RSS.com - **Best for monetization:** Podbean If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **analytics**, or **YouTube distribution**.
retrieval Mentioned
If you want **true video podcast hosting**, my short list is: 1. **Spotify for Creators** — free hosting, supports uploading audio and video, and is the most straightforward if you want your show centered on Spotify. It also says it supports both formats and has video publishing built in. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Libsyn** — a strong all-around host with explicit video podcast hosting support, plus distribution to YouTube and other platforms. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Podbean** — one of the better choices if you want video hosting plus YouTube/Apple Podcasts video workflows; it now supports video episodes and HLS streaming for Apple Podcasts on higher plans. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Riverside** — best if recording/editing the video podcast matters most; it’s built for 4K recording, editing, and publishing/integration workflows. ([riverside.fm](https://riverside.fm/solutions/podcasters?utm_source=openai)) **Good audio hosts, but not ideal for native video hosting:** - **Buzzsprout** and **Transistor** are primarily audio hosts; their docs say video is handled via workarounds or future possibilities, not as core native hosting. ([podcast.xyonix.com](https://podcast.xyonix.com/help/106-video-podcasting?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - **Best free option:** Spotify for Creators. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Best premium all-around host:** Libsyn. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for recording-first creators:** Riverside. ([riverside.fm](https://riverside.fm/solutions/podcasters?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best for beginners / best for monetization / best for YouTube-first / best budget”** table.
What podcast hosting platforms work well for business podcasts? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For business podcasts, these hosting platforms work especially well: - **Libsyn** — very reliable, good analytics, solid for serious business shows. - **Buzzsprout** — easy to use, clean dashboard, great for beginners and small teams. - **Captivate** — strong for growth, team workflows, and marketing-focused podcasts. - **Transistor** — best for branded business podcasts, multiple shows, and simple collaboration. - **Podbean** — good all-around option with monetization and live-streaming features. - **RSS.com** — straightforward pricing, easy setup, good for solo hosts and small businesses. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall for business:** **Transistor** - **Best for analytics:** **Libsyn** - **Best for ease of use:** **Buzzsprout** - **Best for teams/agencies:** **Captivate** If you want, I can also give you the best choice based on your budget, audience size, or whether you want lead generation features.
retrieval Mentioned
For **business podcasts**, these are the strongest options: - **Transistor** — great if you want a polished brand site, team collaboration, and multiple shows under one account. It includes a podcast website, RSS feed, analytics, and team invites. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/features/podcast-website-builder/?utm_source=openai)) - **Captivate** — a solid choice for agencies, networks, or internal/business use. Its Business plan is explicitly aimed at networks and professionals managing podcasts for clients, and it includes private podcasting for businesses. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/features?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — best if you want the easiest setup and good promotion tools. It offers a podcast website, transcripts, advanced stats, unlimited team members, and month-to-month billing. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/features?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** — good for established shows that want strong distribution and monetization. It supports audio/video hosting, automatic distribution to major platforms, players you can embed on your site, and Apple Podcasts subscriptions integration. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/libsyn-podcast-hosting-features/?utm_source=openai)) - **RSS.com** — a strong value pick if you want simple hosting plus analytics, transcripts, a website, and easy distribution. It also supports unlimited storage and collaborator invites. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/features/podcast-hosting?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — worth considering if monetization and team workflows matter. It offers unlimited audio/video hosting, a professional podcast website, and multi-admin support for business use. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall for business branding:** Transistor - **Best for agencies/internal podcasts:** Captivate - **Best for simplicity:** Buzzsprout - **Best for monetization:** Libsyn or Podbean - **Best budget/value:** RSS.com If you want, I can narrow this down to **solo founder**, **marketing team**, or **private/internal company podcast** use cases.
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for a hobby podcast? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For a hobby podcast, the best hosts are usually the ones that are **easy, cheap/free, and reliable**. ### Best overall picks - **Spotify for Podcasters** (free) Best if you want the simplest setup and don’t want to pay. Good analytics, easy publishing, and built-in distribution. - **Buzzsprout** Best beginner-friendly paid option. Very easy to use, clean dashboard, and solid support. Great if you want a nicer experience than free hosts. - **Podbean** Best budget paid host with generous storage. Good if you may release lots of episodes or want a straightforward all-in-one platform. ### Also good - **Captivate** Great if you want strong podcast growth tools and a polished interface. - **Transistor** Nice for multiple shows and simple team workflows, but usually more than a casual hobby podcaster needs. - **RSS.com** Good value, easy to use, and a solid middle ground between free and premium. ### My quick recommendation - **Free hobby podcast:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Best paid starter option:** Buzzsprout - **Best budget choice:** Podbean If you want, I can also give you a **“best for under $20/month”** shortlist.
retrieval Not mentioned
For a **hobby podcast**, I’d usually rank them like this: 1. **Spotify for Creators** — best if you want **free hosting** and simple setup. Spotify says it offers **unlimited hosting**, distribution everywhere, audio/video uploads, analytics, comments, and monetization tools. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast)) 2. **RSS.com** — best **budget-friendly paid** option. It has a **free plan** for local/niche shows and a paid plan starting at **$11.99/month annually**, with unlimited episodes/audio and analytics. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/pricing/)) 3. **Buzzsprout** — best if you want **beginner-friendly paid hosting** with strong polish and no long-term contract; Buzzsprout says it’s month-to-month and includes podcast website, RSS feed, stats, transcripts, and more. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/pricing)) 4. **Transistor** — best if you want a cleaner, more “pro” feel and may start more than one show later. Their Starter plan is **$19/month** with unlimited podcasts and 20K monthly downloads, plus a 14-day free trial. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/)) 5. **Simplecast** — solid if you want a straightforward paid host; Basic starts at **$15/month** and includes unlimited storage/uploads and a show website. ([simplecast.com](https://www.simplecast.com/pricing)) 6. **Podbean** — good if you care about **monetization** or video/audio flexibility; pricing starts at **$12/month annually** for the audio plan, with higher tiers for more features. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting-pricing)) **My quick pick:** - **Free hobby podcast:** Spotify for Creators. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast)) - **Best cheap paid host:** RSS.com. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/pricing/)) - **Best overall beginner experience:** Buzzsprout. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/pricing)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best by budget” shortlist** or a **top 3 for your exact use case**.
Which podcast hosting platforms are good for monetizing a show? discovery 70/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Good podcast hosts for monetization: - **Spotify for Creators (formerly Anchor)** — easy to start, supports **ads, subscriptions, and listener support**. - **Libsyn** — strong for **dynamic ad insertion, private feeds, and platform integrations**. - **Buzzsprout** — good analytics and simple setup; offers **podcast monetization tools** and ad marketplace access. - **Acast** — one of the best for **ad monetization**, with **dynamic ads** and sponsorship options. - **Podbean** — solid all-in-one choice with **ads, premium content, listener donations, and paid subscriptions**. - **Transistor** — great for branded shows; supports **private podcasts** and paid memberships via integrations. - **Captivate** — built for growth; includes **CTA tools, private podcasts, and monetization integrations**. Best picks by goal: - **Best for ads:** Acast, Libsyn - **Best all-in-one:** Podbean, Spotify for Creators - **Best for premium/private shows:** Transistor, Libsyn If you want, I can also rank them for **beginners**, **serious ad revenue**, or **paid memberships**.
retrieval Mentioned
Good options for monetizing a podcast: - **Spotify for Creators** — best if you want built-in monetization on Spotify, including ads and fan support, but the main monetization program is for shows hosted there and is currently limited by eligibility/location. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/monetization?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** — strong all-around choice for ads + subscriptions; it offers Libsyn Ads, dynamic host-read ads, and Apple Podcasts Subscriptions publishing for all podcasters. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/podcast-monetization?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — good if you want a simple all-in-one host with advertising, listener support, and premium/payed content options. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/site/premiumPodcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — solid for smaller shows that want listener support, subscriptions, and an ad marketplace without a lot of setup. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/subscriptions?utm_source=openai)) - **Captivate** — good if you want memberships, tips, exclusive/early-access content, and sponsor tools in one place. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/feature-focus/podcast-monetization?utm_source=openai)) - **Megaphone** — best for larger or network-style shows focused on advanced ad monetization; it’s tied to Spotify Audience Network access. ([support.megaphone.fm](https://support.megaphone.fm/en/articles/4637807-spotify-audience-network-submission-process-overview?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Best overall monetization flexibility: **Libsyn** - Best simple creator-friendly setup: **Buzzsprout** - Best if you want hosted monetization tightly integrated with Spotify: **Spotify for Creators** - Best for premium/private content: **Podbean** or **Captivate**. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/podcast-monetization?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best 3 for your show size and niche**.
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for analytics and listener insights? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Top picks for **podcast hosting with strong analytics and listener insights**: 1. **Spotify for Creators** Best for: **simple, built-in audience analytics** - Free hosting - Good audience demographics and consumption data - Easy if you want everything in one place 2. **Captivate** Best for: **actionable analytics + growth tools** - Strong dashboard for downloads, trends, and episode performance - Listener retention and engagement features - Great for independent podcasters 3. **Buzzsprout** Best for: **clean analytics and ease of use** - Very beginner-friendly - Good episode stats and listener geography - Solid integrations and reporting 4. **Transistor** Best for: **multiple shows and team workflows** - Detailed analytics across shows - Good private podcast options - Nice if you manage a network or brand podcast 5. **Libsyn** Best for: **deep, traditional podcast analytics** - Longtime industry standard - Strong download stats and audience data - Good for established podcasters who want reliability 6. **Podbean** Best for: **robust stats at a lower price point** - Strong listener analytics - Monetization features - Good all-in-one option **Best overall for analytics:** **Captivate** **Best easiest to use:** **Buzzsprout** **Best free option:** **Spotify for Creators** If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **best for beginners**, or **best for advanced analytics**.
retrieval Mentioned
If your top priority is **analytics and listener insights**, I’d shortlist these podcast hosts: - **Captivate** — best for deep listener behavior data. It offers IAB-certified analytics, unique listeners, episode comparisons, geography/device/app data, and web-player behavior like skips/replays. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/feature-focus/iab-certified-analytics?utm_source=openai)) - **Simplecast** — strongest for enterprise-style audience analytics. Its “Audience by Simplecast” dashboard shows where listeners are and where they listen, and its metrics are IAB certified. ([simplecast.com](https://www.simplecast.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** — a solid all-around choice if you want trusted stats with broad podcast-hosting features. Libsyn highlights IAB-certified downloads plus geo trends, platform stats, and YouTube data in one dashboard. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Transistor** — great if you want clean analytics across apps, devices, and countries. It shows listen trends, episode breakdowns, listener devices, and a listener map; Transistor says its stats are compliant with IAB guidelines. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/features/podcast-analytics-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Acast** — strong for geography and unique-listener insights. Its Insights dashboard breaks data down by platform, location, and unique listeners, with location maps and city/country breakdowns. ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/3449708-understanding-your-insights-dashboard?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — good if you want richer engagement data and heatmap-style stats. Podbean’s newer stats emphasize listener engagement, skips/pauses, consumption time, and location/device info. ([podads.podbean.com](https://podads.podbean.com/podcast-hosting-features?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — best for simpler, creator-friendly analytics. It provides IAB-compliant download stats, episode pacing, device/app breakdowns, and directory-specific stats, though it does not show listen duration inside Buzzsprout itself. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/22-play?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall analytics:** Captivate - **Best for bigger teams/brands:** Simplecast or Libsyn - **Best easy-to-use option:** Buzzsprout If you want, I can also turn this into a **“best for beginners / best for advanced analytics / best for monetization”** comparison chart.
What podcast hosting platform is best for multiple shows? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
**Best overall for multiple shows: _Captivate_** Why it’s a strong pick: - Built for **managing multiple podcasts under one account** - Easy to organize shows, team members, and analytics - Good for **networks, agencies, and creators with several series** - Solid marketing tools and clean dashboard **Also worth considering:** - **Transistor** — best if you want a polished, simple setup for a few shows - **Buzzsprout** — easiest for beginners, but less ideal for many shows - **Libsyn** — very established and flexible, good for larger catalogs - **RSS.com** — budget-friendly and straightforward for multiple podcasts If you want one answer: **Captivate**. If you want, I can also recommend the best option based on your **budget, number of shows, and whether you need team access**.
retrieval Mentioned
**Best overall for multiple shows: Transistor.** It’s built for hosting multiple podcasts on one account with unlimited podcasts, plus strong team/collaboration controls and a network website option for grouping shows. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/?utm_source=openai)) **Best if you want the easiest all-in-one multi-show setup:** Captivate. It explicitly supports multiple podcasts under one account, and its network/sub-network features are made for managing a podcast “network.” ([help.captivate.fm](https://help.captivate.fm/en/article/how-to-sync-podcasts-between-captivate-and-your-wordpress-website-1rfp6dm/?utm_source=openai)) **Best budget-friendly alternative:** Buzzsprout. It now has multi-podcast plans (up to 5 or 10 shows depending on plan), with shared upload allowance across shows. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/222-why-can-t-i-switch-plans?utm_source=openai)) **If monetization/enterprise matters most:** Libsyn is still worth a look, especially for larger networks and ad infrastructure. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/Libsyn-Bolsters-All-in-One-Podcast-Creator-and-Advertising-Platform.pdf?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down to **best for low cost**, **best for teams**, or **best for video podcasts**.
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for a new podcast network? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For a **new podcast network**, the best platforms are the ones that handle **multiple shows, team workflows, analytics, and monetization** well. ### Top picks **1. Libsyn** - Best for: reliable, network-style hosting - Strong points: multiple shows, good analytics, simple RSS management, solid uptime - Why it’s good for networks: it’s built for serious podcasters and scales well **2. Captivate** - Best for: growing networks that want modern tools - Strong points: unlimited shows, team permissions, dynamic ad insertion, built-in website - Why it’s good for networks: very network-friendly and easier to manage than older platforms **3. Buzzsprout** - Best for: new networks that want ease of use - Strong points: very beginner-friendly, clean dashboard, good analytics - Limitation: not as network-focused as Libsyn or Captivate **4. Transistor** - Best for: multi-show publishing and branded podcast networks - Strong points: unlimited podcasts on higher plans, private podcasts, team access, strong embed tools - Why it’s good for networks: excellent if you want a polished network presence **5. Spreaker** - Best for: networks with live or radio-style content - Strong points: live podcasting, monetization options, multiple shows - Why it’s good for networks: good if your network includes live shows or streaming ### My short recommendation - **Best overall for a new network:** **Captivate** - **Most proven/network-standard:** **Libsyn** - **Best for clean branded multi-show setup:** **Transistor** If you want, I can also give you a **“best by budget”** list or compare **Captivate vs Libsyn vs Transistor** side by side.
retrieval Mentioned
For a **new podcast network**, the best hosts are usually the ones that handle **multiple shows, team permissions, analytics, and monetization** well. My short list: 1. **Captivate** — best all-around for a new network if you want clear pricing and network-ready collaboration; Captivate’s **Business** plan is explicitly “perfect for Networks,” and its plans are based on download limits rather than per-show fees. ([help.captivate.fm](https://help.captivate.fm/en/article/plans-pricing-faq-10rg7d8/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Libsyn** — best if you want a long-standing, feature-rich host with **network RSS feed**, **multi-user management**, and monetization options like **dynamic ad insertion** and subscriptions. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/3/plans-and-pricing/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Acast** — best if ad monetization is a priority; its **Ace** tier is positioned for “professional podcasters and networks,” and Acast also offers a sponsorship marketplace plus multiple-show support. ([acast.com](https://www.acast.com/en-us/pricing?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Omny Studio** — best for larger or more operationally complex networks; it’s positioned as an enterprise platform with **multiple podcasts, user access, APIs, and advanced analytics**. ([omnystudio.com](https://omnystudio.com/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Transistor** — best for a lean team that values collaboration; it supports **multiple podcasts** and **unlimited team members** on all plans. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/features/invite-multiple-collaborators/?utm_source=openai)) **My recommendation:** - **Most new networks:** **Captivate** or **Libsyn**. ([help.captivate.fm](https://help.captivate.fm/en/article/plans-pricing-faq-10rg7d8/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ad-driven networks:** **Acast** or **Omny Studio**. ([learn.acast.com](https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/8143532-the-sponsorships-marketplace?utm_source=openai)) - **Small network with many collaborators:** **Transistor**. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/features/invite-multiple-collaborators/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **3-host comparison table** based on your network size, budget, and whether you need ads, private feeds, or team workflows.
Which podcast hosting platforms are best for artists and musicians? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Best podcast hosts for artists and musicians: - **Spotify for Podcasters** — best free starter option; easy publishing, solid analytics, built-in Spotify audience. - **Buzzsprout** — best all-around beginner-friendly host; simple UI, good distribution, strong support. - **Transistor** — best for multiple shows or a more polished brand; great analytics and clean embeds. - **Captivate** — great for creators who want growth tools, email capture, and monetization options. - **Podbean** — strong if you want built-in monetization, live streaming, and video podcast support. - **Libsyn** — best for serious long-term podcasters; very reliable and customizable. For artists/musicians specifically, I’d narrow it to: 1. **Spotify for Podcasters** if you want free + easy. 2. **Buzzsprout** if you want the smoothest setup. 3. **Captivate** if you want audience growth + memberships. If you’re sharing lots of music clips, make sure you own the rights or have licenses—many hosts don’t handle copyright clearance for you. If you want, I can also recommend the best option based on your budget and whether you’re doing interviews, music commentary, or a behind-the-scenes artist podcast.
retrieval Mentioned
For most **artists and musicians**, the best podcast hosts are: 1. **Transistor** — best if you want a clean branded website, custom domain, and easy multi-show management. It also supports private podcasts and detailed analytics. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Captivate** — best if you care about monetization, audience growth tools, and a strong podcast website. It includes early access/exclusive content tools and a customizable site. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Spotify for Creators** — best if you want free hosting, distribution everywhere, video/audio upload, comments, analytics, and built-in monetization options. Spotify also explicitly frames podcasting as a good fit for musicians sharing behind-the-scenes content. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Libsyn** — best if you want a long-established pro host with broad creator tooling and monetization options; its recent creator-focused updates also include expanded recording and music-related creator support. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Libsyn-Introduces-Podcast-Creation-Recording-Features.pdf?utm_source=openai)) **My quick recommendation:** - **Solo artist / indie musician:** Spotify for Creators or Transistor. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Serious brand / fan club / premium content:** Captivate. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/?utm_source=openai)) - **More traditional pro podcasting setup:** Libsyn. ([investor.libsyn.com](https://investor.libsyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/PM25-Press_100M-Creator-Payouts.pdf?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **best for music podcasts**, or **best for selling membership content**.
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for private podcasts? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are the best podcast hosting platforms for **private podcasts**: 1. **Buzzsprout + private RSS** - Best overall for ease of use. - Clean interface, reliable hosting, simple private feed setup. - Good if you want a straightforward solution. 2. **Transistor** - Best for multiple private shows and teams. - Lets you create private podcasts, invite listeners, and manage several feeds easily. - Strong analytics and polished workflow. 3. **Captivate** - Best for monetized private podcasts. - Good private podcast tools, listener management, and flexible membership use. - Great if you want to sell access. 4. **Supercast** - Best for paid memberships and premium content. - Built specifically for private/premium podcasts. - Strong access control and subscriber management. 5. **PodBean** - Best budget option. - Offers private podcasting and paid subscription support. - Good if you want an affordable all-in-one host. 6. **Libsyn** - Best for long-term, established podcasters. - Private podcast support is solid, but the UI feels more old-school. - Reliable and very proven. ### Best picks by use case - **Easiest to use:** Buzzsprout - **Best for teams:** Transistor - **Best for paid private podcasts:** Supercast - **Best budget choice:** PodBean If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 recommendation based on your exact use case** (internal company podcast, paid membership, course audio, or client delivery).
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best options, depending on what you mean by “private”: 1. **Transistor** — best all-around if you want **real private RSS feeds** plus flexibility for memberships, internal shows, and unlisted podcasts. It also added **Spotify Open Access** for private podcasts, so members can listen in Spotify. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/features/private-podcasts/)) 2. **Patreon** — best if your podcast is tied to **paid memberships**. Patreon gives members a **private RSS link**, supports listening in podcast apps, and can also deliver episodes in the Patreon app and via Spotify integration. ([support.patreon.com](https://support.patreon.com/hc/en-us/articles/115004204206-Setting-Up-a-Podcast-on-Patreon)) 3. **Hello Audio** — best for **courses, coaching, and lead magnets**. It’s built specifically for turning content into private podcast feeds that listeners access through an invitation link. ([helloaudio.fm](https://helloaudio.fm/)) 4. **Captivate** — strong choice for **premium or internal private podcasts**. It provides a secure private feed and unique invitations/URLs for your audience. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/feature-focus/private-podcasting)) 5. **uStudio** — best for **enterprise/internal communications**. It’s built around secure private podcast hosting, SSO, mobile apps, and corporate use cases. ([ustudio.com](https://ustudio.com/products/private-podcasting/)) **Quick take:** - **Creators/memberships:** Patreon or Transistor - **Courses/coaching:** Hello Audio - **Corporate/internal:** uStudio - **Simple private feed:** Captivate or Transistor If you want, I can also give you a **“best by budget”** shortlist or compare **pricing/features**.
What podcast hosting platform is best for team collaboration? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
**Best overall for team collaboration: _Transistor_** Why it’s a strong choice: - Easy **multi-user access** for producers, editors, and hosts - Simple **roles/permissions** - Supports **multiple podcasts** under one account - Clean workflow and dashboard, so it’s easy for teams to manage episodes **Good alternatives:** - **Captivate** — best if you want strong team workflow + growth tools - **Buzzsprout** — easiest for small teams, very user-friendly - **Libsyn** — solid for larger, more technical teams - **Podbean** — good if you want private/internal podcasts and live features **My pick:** - **Small to mid-size team:** **Transistor** - **Growth-focused team:** **Captivate** - **Beginner-friendly team:** **Buzzsprout** If you want, I can also recommend the **best platform based on team size and budget**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If **team collaboration** is the top priority, I’d pick **Transistor** for most teams. It lets you add **unlimited collaborators** per podcast and has clear roles for **Owner, Admins, Members, and Analytics** users. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/features/invite-multiple-collaborators/)) **Best alternatives:** - **Captivate** — best if you want the **most flexible permissions** and unlimited team members. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/news/role-management-overhaul)) - **RSS.com** — good for smaller teams; it supports collaborators, but caps invites at **up to 10**. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/features/collaborators)) - **Podbean** — workable for teams, but multiple-admin support is only on **Network and above** plans. ([help.podbean.com](https://help.podbean.com/support/solutions/articles/25000027953-adding-team-members)) **My quick take:** - **Best overall for collaboration:** Transistor - **Best for granular permissions:** Captivate - **Best budget/simple option:** RSS.com If you want, I can also recommend the best one for your team size and budget.
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for teachers and educators? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For teachers and educators, the best podcast hosting platforms are usually the ones that are **easy to use, affordable, and good for sharing with students**. ## Best options ### 1. **Buzzsprout** **Best overall for most teachers** - Very easy to set up - Clean dashboard - Good analytics - Simple website and episode pages - Free plan available **Why educators like it:** low learning curve, great if you want to publish class podcasts or student projects fast. --- ### 2. **Spotify for Podcasters** **Best free option** - Free hosting - Easy recording and publishing - Built-in distribution to Spotify - Good for beginners **Why educators like it:** no upfront cost, which is great for classrooms and clubs. --- ### 3. **Podbean** **Best for classroom and private podcasts** - Affordable plans - Private podcasting options - Good mobile app - Easy monetization if needed **Why educators like it:** excellent if you want to share episodes only with students or parents. --- ### 4. **Transistor** **Best for schools, teams, and multiple podcasts** - Professional-grade hosting - Can run multiple shows on one account - Good analytics - Private podcast feeds **Why educators like it:** ideal for districts, departments, or schools managing several podcasts. --- ### 5. **Captivate** **Best for growth and polished presentation** - Strong podcast marketing tools - Good analytics - Easy website and embed options - Supports private podcasts **Why educators like it:** useful if you want a more professional public-facing show. --- ## Best picks by use case - **Easiest to use:** Buzzsprout - **Free:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Private student-only podcasts:** Podbean - **School/district use:** Transistor - **Best marketing tools:** Captivate ## My recommendation If you’re a teacher starting out, go with **Buzzsprout** or **Spotify for Podcasters**. If you need **private episodes for students**, choose **Podbean** or **Transistor**. If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by price, ease of use, and classroom features**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best podcast hosting platforms for teachers and educators: - **Spotify for Creators** — best if you want **free hosting** and an easy start. It offers unlimited hosting, distribution, analytics, monetization, and supports **audio + video** uploads. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — best for **schools, universities, and multi-podcast departments**. Their education page specifically calls out support for **multiple podcasts, multiple admins**, and scalable use for institutions. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/education-podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Transistor** — best for **teams and private/internal podcasts**. It supports unlimited podcasts on one account and private/unlisted feeds, which is useful for staff training, class extras, or member-only content. ([support.transistor.fm](https://support.transistor.fm/en/article/what-are-private-podcast-subscribers-12lzzka/?utm_source=openai)) - **Captivate** — best for **growth and private feeds**. It emphasizes unlimited podcasts, strong analytics/marketing tools, and built-in private podcasting options. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/january-sale?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — best for **simplicity**. Its pricing page highlights a free start, podcast website, and unlimited team members on paid plans, which is nice for small educator teams. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Solo teacher / first podcast:** Spotify for Creators or Buzzsprout. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **School / district / university:** Podbean or Transistor. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/education-podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Private faculty podcast or student-only feed:** Transistor or Captivate. ([support.transistor.fm](https://support.transistor.fm/en/article/how-to-use-the-unlisted-podcasts-feature-5kax2i/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **top 3 based on your exact use case** (solo teacher, classroom podcast, school newsletter, or private staff training).
Which podcast hosting platforms are best for nonprofits? discovery 10/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best podcast hosting platforms for nonprofits: 1. **Buzzsprout** Best all-around for small to mid-sized nonprofits. Easy to use, solid analytics, good website/player embeds, and affordable plans. 2. **Transistor** Best for multiple shows, teams, and organizations that want clean branding and unlimited podcasts on one account. Great if you have staff/volunteers managing episodes. 3. **Captivate** Best for growth and fundraising-focused podcasts. Strong marketing tools, calls-to-action, and private podcast options. 4. **Podbean** Best budget-friendly option. Good if you want a low-cost host with donation/support tools and simple publishing. 5. **Simplecast** Best for polished analytics and professional distribution. Great if your nonprofit wants more advanced reporting and a sleek player. ### My quick picks - **Small nonprofit / easiest setup:** Buzzsprout - **Multiple shows / team workflow:** Transistor - **Want donor engagement tools:** Captivate or Podbean - **Need strong analytics:** Simplecast If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **ease of use**, or **nonprofit-specific features**.
retrieval Mentioned
Best picks for nonprofits: 1. **Captivate** — strong all-around choice if you want a nonprofit discount and built-in private podcasting. They offer **25% off for registered charities/non-profits** and include private podcast feeds. ([help.captivate.fm](https://help.captivate.fm/en/article/plans-pricing-faq-10rg7d8/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Transistor** — great for teams and multi-show orgs. They offer **15% off for non-profits**, plus unlimited shows, detailed analytics, website building, and private podcasts. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/non-profits/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Podbean** — best if you want a more budget-friendly discount and live/community features. Podbean says nonprofits get a **50% discount** and it supports publishing, analytics, and live streaming. ([blog.podbean.com](https://blog.podbean.com/podbean-shares-tools-for-free-virtual-gatherings-to-support-social-isolation-efforts/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Simplecast** — solid for nonprofits that want clean hosting and collaboration. Registered non-profits get **25% off standard plans**. ([help.simplecast.com](https://help.simplecast.com/hc/en-us/articles/21953609009693?utm_source=openai)) 5. **RSS.com** — worth asking about if price is a concern; they explicitly say they offer **steeply discounted hosting for nonprofits**, but you need to contact them for details. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/blog/save-on-podcast-hosting/?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Libsyn** — a good fit if analytics and monetization matter; their current plans start at **$12/month** and include IAB-verified stats, with team and video options on higher tiers. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/3/plans-and-pricing/?utm_source=openai)) **My short recommendation:** - **Best overall for most nonprofits:** **Captivate** - **Best discount:** **Podbean** - **Best for multiple shows / internal communications:** **Transistor** If you want, I can narrow this down by **budget**, **team size**, or whether you need **private/internal podcasts**.
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for mobile recording workflows? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If your workflow is **record on a phone/tablet, edit fast, publish fast**, the best podcast hosts are usually the ones with **easy mobile uploads, simple episode management, and good distribution**. ### Best picks for mobile recording workflows **1) Buzzsprout** Best overall for simplicity. - Very easy to upload from mobile - Clean app-like web experience - Strong Spotify/Apple distribution - Good for quick publishing after recording in apps like **Riverside**, **Voice Memos**, or **Dolby On** **2) Captivate** Best for creators who want more control. - Mobile-friendly dashboard - Great if you publish often - Strong analytics and monetization tools - Good for solo creators and teams **3) Transistor** Best for multi-show podcasters. - Easy episode uploads from mobile browser - Great for managing multiple podcasts - Solid analytics - Nice if you record on the go and need a reliable publishing backend **4) Libsyn** Best for long-running podcasts. - Very established hosting platform - Reliable mobile publishing via browser - Good storage and feed control - Not the prettiest, but very dependable **5) Podbean** Best if you want hosting plus monetization/community features. - Mobile-friendly - Easy publishing workflow - Built-in live streaming and monetization options - Good for creators who want an all-in-one platform ### Best pairing with mobile recording apps For the actual recording side, these work especially well with the hosts above: - **Riverside** — best quality for remote/mobile interviews - **Dolby On** — great for solo voice recordings from a phone - **Ferrite** — excellent iPhone editing workflow - **Descript** — good if you record on mobile but edit on desktop ### Quick recommendation - **Best overall:** Buzzsprout - **Best for teams/multiple shows:** Transistor - **Best for power users:** Captivate - **Best established option:** Libsyn If you want, I can also give you a **best stack for iPhone**, **best stack for Android**, or **best low-cost setup**.
retrieval Mentioned
For **mobile recording workflows**, the best podcast hosting platforms right now are: 1. **Podbean** — best overall for on-phone recording/editing/publishing. Its app supports mobile recording, editing, AI optimization, publishing, and even group recording/livestreaming. ([help.podbean.com](https://help.podbean.com/support/solutions/articles/25000034072-record-and-edit-your-podcast?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Buzzsprout** — best if you want a clean mobile **management** app. It’s strong for publishing, stats, sharing, and show updates on the go, though it’s more management than full recording. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/mobile?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Libsyn** — best for creators who want a solid host with mobile-friendly control, analytics, and broad distribution, plus mobile-oriented tools/features in its ecosystem. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Captivate** — good for mobile-adjacent workflows if you schedule guests/recording sessions and want built-in growth/monetization tools. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Spotify for Creators** — only if you’re using it mainly for hosting/distribution; Spotify has removed its native recording/editing tools, and now pushes creators toward Riverside for recording/editing. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/creators/article/13270040217243/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best pure mobile workflow:** Podbean - **Best mobile management app:** Buzzsprout - **Best “host + pro platform” combo:** Libsyn If you want, I can also rank them for **solo recording**, **remote interviews**, or **video podcasting**.
What podcast hosting platform is best for a seasonal podcast? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
**Best overall for a seasonal podcast: _Transistor.fm_** Why it fits seasonal shows: - easy batch upload + scheduling - no episode limits - can go quiet between seasons without hassle - good analytics and a clean public site/player - supports multiple shows under one account **Good alternatives:** - **Captivate.fm** — best if you want strong growth tools and audience capture - **Buzzsprout** — easiest for beginners - **Libsyn** — solid if you want a long-running, traditional host If you want, I can also give you the **best seasonal host by budget** or **by ease of use**.
retrieval Mentioned
**Best pick: Captivate** for a seasonal podcast. It explicitly supports the Podcasting 2.0 `podcast:season` tag, which helps seasons show up cleanly in modern apps, and it’s built for shows that publish in bursts rather than year-round. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/podcast-industry-news/podcasting-2-0-explained-rss-enhancements-independent-podcaster?utm_source=openai)) If you want the **best overall alternatives**: - **Transistor** — best if you want a polished all-around host with easy multi-show management, a built-in website, private podcasts, and clear pricing. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — best if you want the simplest setup and a very beginner-friendly workflow; it also has a strong no-contract pricing model and subscription tools. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** — best if you care more about established, feature-rich hosting and monetization than season-specific tooling. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/?utm_source=openai)) **My short recommendation:** - **Solo indie seasonal show:** Captivate - **Want easiest UX:** Buzzsprout - **Want flexibility / multiple shows:** Transistor If you want, I can also give you a **“best by budget”** recommendation.
Which podcast hosting platforms are best for educational series with episodes and transcripts? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For an educational podcast series, the best platforms are usually the ones that make **episode publishing, SEO, and transcript handling** easy. ### Best options - **Transistor** – Great for clean podcast websites, multiple shows, and easy episode management. Good if you want a polished home for an educational series. - **Captivate** – Strong all-around choice for creators who want advanced analytics, transcript support, and a good website. - **Buzzsprout** – Very beginner-friendly, simple to use, and solid for publishing episodes with transcripts. - **Podbean** – Good if you want an all-in-one platform with hosting, website, and monetization options. - **Spotify for Creators** – Free and easy, but less flexible if you want a more professional educational setup. ### Best for transcripts - **Transistor** - **Captivate** - **Buzzsprout** These are the easiest if transcripts matter for: - accessibility - searchability - SEO - classroom/reference use ### My top pick If your show is an educational series with transcripts, I’d pick **Transistor** or **Captivate**. - **Choose Transistor** if you want the best-looking, most professional setup. - **Choose Captivate** if you want strong podcast growth tools and transcript-friendly publishing. - **Choose Buzzsprout** if you want the easiest option to get started. If you want, I can also give you a **best platform by budget** or **best platform for embedding transcripts on your website**.
retrieval Mentioned
For an **educational series** with **episodes + transcripts**, my top picks are: 1. **RSS.com** — best for simple course-style publishing. It explicitly markets education podcasts, **free transcripts**, **chapter markers**, and a podcast website, which is great for lessons and long-form learning. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/podcast-hosting/education/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Transistor** — best if you want clean episode pages and flexible transcript exports. It supports AI transcription, speaker detection, and transcript formats like **TXT, SRT, VTT, JSON, and HTML**, plus web pages for each transcript. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/changelog/ai-transcription/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Buzzsprout** — best for ease of use. It includes **automatic transcripts**, an SEO-friendly podcast website, and straightforward episode publishing. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Captivate** — best for structured educational content. It emphasizes **chapter markers**, transcript editing, and show-planning tools that work well for lesson-based series. ([help.captivate.fm](https://help.captivate.fm/en/article/how-to-add-chapters-to-your-podcast-episode-o5b56q/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Libsyn** — best if you want a more pro/enterprise host with transcript support via the Podcasting 2.0 transcript tag and Apple Podcasts transcript compatibility. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/blog/how-do-i-get-apple-podcasts-transcriptions-for-my-podcast-a-quick-faq/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick recommendation:** - **Best overall for education:** **RSS.com** - **Best for transcript control:** **Transistor** - **Best beginner-friendly choice:** **Buzzsprout** If you want, I can also give you a **feature-by-feature comparison table** for these platforms.
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for ad-supported podcasts? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Best podcast hosting platforms for **ad-supported podcasts**: 1. **Spotify for Creators (formerly Anchor)** - Best if you want easy publishing + built-in monetization. - Good ad tools, dynamic insertion, and simple setup. - Best for smaller creators or podcasts already on Spotify. 2. **Libsyn** - One of the strongest choices for serious ad-supported shows. - Great reliability, advanced analytics, and dynamic ad insertion. - Widely used by network and business podcasts. 3. **Acast** - Excellent for ad monetization. - Strong ad marketplace, dynamic ad insertion, and CPM-based revenue opportunities. - Best if you want hands-off monetization and a bigger ad network. 4. **Megaphone** - Premium option for larger shows and networks. - Strong ad serving, audience targeting, and enterprise-level tools. - Best for high-volume, professionally monetized podcasts. 5. **Blubrry** - Solid all-around host with good monetization support. - Includes stats, WordPress integration, and ad insertion options. - Good for independent creators who want control. 6. **RedCircle** - Great for automated ad monetization. - Offers dynamic ad insertion and access to a host-read ad marketplace. - Good choice for growing podcasts. ### Best overall picks - **Best for monetization:** **Acast** - **Best for large/pro shows:** **Megaphone** - **Best value + reliability:** **Libsyn** - **Best easy starter option:** **Spotify for Creators** - **Best for automation:** **RedCircle** If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **ad revenue potential**, or **best for small vs large podcasts**.
retrieval Mentioned
If your goal is **ad-supported monetization**, the strongest podcast hosts right now are: 1. **Libsyn** — best all-around for ad monetization. It offers **Automatic Podcast Ads** plus **Libsyn Ads**/ad marketplace tools and supports dynamic insertion for old and new episodes. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/podcast-monetization?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Podbean** — best if you want a full ad stack in one place. Its **PodAds** system supports **dynamic ad insertion**, ad campaigns, targeting, and reporting. ([podads.podbean.com](https://podads.podbean.com/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Captivate** — best for indie shows that want flexible dynamic inserts. Its **AMIE** engine supports pre-roll, mid-roll, post-roll, and back-catalog monetization. ([help.captivate.fm](https://help.captivate.fm/en/article/amie-dynamic-ad-insertion-faqs-optzy9/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **RSS.com** — best for simple, hands-off programmatic ads. Its **PAID** feature automatically inserts ads and is designed for easy setup. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/blog/rss-com-launches-paid-easy-programmatic-ads-for-podcast-monetization/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Buzzsprout** — best for smaller shows that want an easy entry point. **Buzzsprout Ads** automatically places mid-rolls, but it requires hosting on Buzzsprout’s paid plans. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/175-buzzsprout-ads?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Spotify for Creators** — best if your audience is heavily on Spotify. Its **Spotify Partner Program** pays ad revenue, but eligibility is stricter and it’s tied to Spotify’s monetization rules. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/us/creators/article/spotify-partner-program/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Libsyn - **Best for ease:** RSS.com - **Best for control/flexibility:** Podbean or Captivate - **Best for smaller creators:** Buzzsprout If you want, I can also rank these by **price, CPM/fill potential, and ease of setup**.
What podcast hosting platform is best for fast RSS distribution? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
**Best pick for fast RSS distribution:** **Captivate** It’s very quick at publishing new episodes to your RSS feed, and the feed updates are usually near-instant after upload. It’s also solid for automation and podcast growth. **Good alternatives:** - **Transistor** — very fast RSS updates, clean workflow - **Libsyn** — super reliable and long-established - **Buzzsprout** — easy to use, generally quick enough **Note:** RSS feed updates are usually fast on all of these, but **Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other apps can take longer** to refresh after the feed changes. If you want, I can also rank them by **speed, price, and best for beginners**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **fast RSS distribution**, I’d pick **Transistor** or **Captivate**. - **Transistor**: your episode is **immediately** put into your RSS feed when you publish, and their docs say most podcast apps pick it up within **4–6 hours**, though it can take up to **24 hours**. ([support.transistor.fm](https://support.transistor.fm/en/article/how-to-distribute-your-podcast-to-apple-podcasts-spotify-etc-un5fxz/?utm_source=openai)) - **Captivate**: their RSS feed is also **updated immediately** on publish. ([help.captivate.fm](https://help.captivate.fm/en/articles/4550833-distribution-faqs?utm_source=openai)) **Best overall for speed:** **Transistor** — because it explicitly calls out immediate feed updates plus typical pickup timing across directories. ([support.transistor.fm](https://support.transistor.fm/en/article/how-to-distribute-your-podcast-to-apple-podcasts-spotify-etc-un5fxz/?utm_source=openai)) One important caveat: **no host can force Apple Podcasts, Spotify, etc. to index instantly**; those platforms still poll RSS on their own schedule, often taking up to **24 hours**. ([support.transistor.fm](https://support.transistor.fm/en/article/how-to-distribute-your-podcast-to-apple-podcasts-spotify-etc-un5fxz/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **ranked shortlist of the fastest podcast hosts** for your budget.
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for growing an audience? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If your goal is **audience growth**, the best podcast hosts are the ones with strong **distribution, analytics, website/SEO tools, clips, and monetization**. ### Best picks **1. Buzzsprout** - Best all-around for growth - Easy distribution to Apple/Spotify/Amazon - Strong analytics and a simple podcast website - Great for beginners who want polished tools fast **2. Captivate** - Best for audience growth features - Built-in podcast website, SEO tools, email capture, CTAs - Good for converting listeners into subscribers - Strong if you want to build a brand, not just upload audio **3. Transistor** - Best for multi-show networks and serious creators - Clean analytics, private podcast support, great embed players - Good website and analytics setup for scaling - Ideal if you plan to manage multiple podcasts **4. Libsyn** - Best for reliability and broad distribution - One of the oldest and most trusted hosts - Solid for monetization and publishing consistency - Less modern than some newer platforms, but very dependable **5. RSS.com** - Best value for growth-focused beginners - Easy setup, unlimited episodes on many plans - Good directory distribution and simple analytics - Strong choice if you want affordable hosting with decent growth tools **6. Podbean** - Best for built-in monetization and live features - Supports ads, memberships, and live streaming - Good if you want multiple revenue options early - Interface is a bit less refined than Buzzsprout/Captivate ### Best overall for growing an audience - **Captivate** if you want the most growth-oriented features - **Buzzsprout** if you want the easiest, most balanced option - **Transistor** if you’re building a network or brand at scale ### What to look for - Apple/Spotify distribution - Good analytics - Podcast website or landing page - Email capture / newsletter integration - Clip sharing or social tools - Dynamic ads / monetization options If you want, I can also give you a **best hosting platform by budget** or **best for beginners vs. professionals**.
retrieval Mentioned
For **growing an audience**, my top picks are: 1. **Captivate** — best for growth-focused indie shows. Strong analytics, easy migration, built-in calls to action, and monetization tools. It also has IAB Tech Lab Podcast Measurement 2.2 certification. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/podcast-product-releases/captivate-updates/captivate-becomes-worlds-first-iab-2-2-certified-podcast-host?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Transistor** — best for brands and teams. Good for multi-show management, private feeds, dynamic ads, tracking URLs, and a strong developer/API angle. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/transistor-growth/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Spotify for Creators** — best if you want discovery inside Spotify plus video support, comments, analytics, and monetization in one place. Spotify says it’s built to distribute and grow shows across major apps, not just Spotify. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Simplecast** — best for reach across platforms, especially if YouTube/video matters. It recently added direct YouTube publishing and unified analytics. ([blog.simplecast.com](https://blog.simplecast.com/grow-your-audience-everywhere-simplecast-adds-youtube-publishing-and-unified-podcast-analytics?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Podbean** — best all-in-one value pick. It combines hosting, apps, live streaming, AI tools, transcripts, and monetization options. ([developers.podbean.com](https://developers.podbean.com/about-us?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Libsyn** — solid if you want a long-established hosting/analytics platform with monetization and distribution depth. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/libsyn-podcast-hosting-features/?utm_source=openai)) 7. **Buzzsprout** — best for beginners who want simplicity and solid promotional tools. Its own growth advice emphasizes SEO, word of mouth, social clips, and promo tools. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/blog/promote-podcast?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall for growth:** Captivate - **Best for teams/brands:** Transistor - **Best for Spotify-first growth/video:** Spotify for Creators - **Best beginner-friendly:** Buzzsprout If you want, I can also narrow this down by **budget**, **video podcasting**, or **business/brand podcast**.
What are the best alternatives to a leading podcast hosting platform? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you mean a top podcast host like **Buzzsprout, Libsyn, or Podbean**, the best alternatives are: - **Captivate** — great for growth tools, smart analytics, and multiple shows. - **Transistor** — excellent for teams and private podcasts; clean, simple dashboard. - **RSS.com** — strong all-around value, easy setup, good for new podcasters. - **Spreaker** — solid if you want live streaming, monetization, and recording tools. - **Simplecast** — best for advanced analytics and professional publishing workflows. - **Podbean** — a good budget-friendly all-in-one option with monetization. - **Acast** — strong for monetization and larger audiences. - **Blubrry** — good if you want WordPress integration via PowerPress. Best picks by need: - **Best overall:** Captivate - **Best for teams:** Transistor - **Best budget option:** RSS.com - **Best for monetization:** Acast or Podbean - **Best for WordPress users:** Blubrry If you tell me which platform you’re currently using, I can give you the closest 1:1 alternatives.
retrieval Mentioned
Here are strong podcast-hosting alternatives, depending on what you want: - **Transistor** — best for **multiple shows / private podcasts**. Unlimited podcasts, unlimited team members, live support, advanced analytics, and built-in website on plans starting at **$19/mo**. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — best for **ease of use** and a polished all-around indie setup. It offers a free plan, episode scheduling, advanced stats, transcripts, and monetization tools; paid plans are month-to-month. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** — best for **monetization and established creators**. It includes IAB-verified stats, automatic distribution to Apple/Spotify/YouTube, built-in ads, and Apple Podcasts Subscriptions integration; plans start at **$12/mo** after a free trial. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/3/plans-and-pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **RSS.com** — best for **budget-friendly all-in-one hosting**. It has a free plan, unlimited audio/episodes, transcripts, a free podcast website, and paid plans starting at **$11.99/mo billed annually**. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — best for **creators who want monetization + live support**. It offers a free account, unlimited storage/unmetered bandwidth on paid tiers, a podcast site/embed player, ads marketplace, and plans starting at **$12/mo billed annually**. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting-pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Captivate** — best for **growth-focused solo creators and teams**. It includes unlimited podcasts/uploads/storage, a 30-day trial, and plans starting at **$17/mo billed yearly**. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Spotify for Creators** — best if you want **free hosting** and are okay staying close to Spotify’s ecosystem. It offers free hosting, RSS distribution, audio/video uploads, analytics, comments, and monetization tools. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your budget, audience size, or monetization goals**.
Which podcast hosting platform is better for monetization versus analytics? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you care more about **monetization**, pick **Acast** or **Podbean**. If you care more about **analytics**, pick **Megaphone** or **Transistor**. ### Quick take - **Best for monetization:** **Acast** - Strong ad marketplace - Dynamic ad insertion - Better built for shows ready to earn - **Best for analytics:** **Megaphone** - Very strong reporting - Enterprise-level audience/ad data - Best if you want deep performance tracking ### Good alternatives - **Podbean** — solid monetization tools, easier for smaller podcasters - **Captivate** — good analytics + marketing features, good all-around option - **Libsyn** — reliable, decent analytics, more traditional hosting - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free and simple, but weaker for serious monetization/analytics ### Bottom line - **Monetization first:** **Acast** - **Analytics first:** **Megaphone** - **Balanced choice:** **Captivate** or **Podbean** If you want, I can also rank the top 5 hosts for **small podcasts**, **growing shows**, or **enterprise brands**.
retrieval Mentioned
**Short answer:** - **Best for monetization:** **Podbean** or **Spotify for Creators**. - **Best for analytics:** **Libsyn**. Why: - **Podbean** advertises multiple built-in monetization tools like ads, dynamic insertion, live-stream monetization, and paid content, plus IAB-certified stats. ([blog.podbean.com](https://blog.podbean.com/podbean-achieves-certification-under-iab-podcast-measurement-guidelines-2-2/?utm_source=openai)) - **Spotify for Creators** has a strong monetization stack, including the Spotify Partner Program, subscriptions, and video revenue, but those monetization options are tied to Spotify eligibility and hosted-content requirements. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/monetization?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** leans hardest into analytics, explicitly promoting **IAB-certified statistics** and “industry-best analytics,” while still offering monetization tools. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/libsynpro-enterprise-podcasting/?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - If your priority is **making money**, pick **Podbean**. ([blog.podbean.com](https://blog.podbean.com/podbean-achieves-certification-under-iab-podcast-measurement-guidelines-2-2/?utm_source=openai)) - If your priority is **deeper measurement/reporting**, pick **Libsyn**. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/libsynpro-enterprise-podcasting/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **1-minute recommendation by show size** (new show, growing show, or network).
What are the best alternatives to a popular podcast hosting service? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you mean a mainstream podcast host like **Buzzsprout** or **Libsyn**, the best alternatives are: - **Spotify for Podcasters** — best free option, simple setup - **Transistor** — best for multiple shows and clean analytics - **Captivate** — great growth tools and private podcasting - **Podbean** — solid all-in-one with monetization options - **RSS.com** — strong value, easy distribution - **Simplecast** — polished analytics and team features - **Castos** — good for WordPress users and private feeds - **Acast** — strong for monetization and ad network access Quick picks: - **Best free:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Best overall:** Transistor - **Best for monetization:** Acast or Podbean - **Best for WordPress:** Castos If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **ease of use**, or **best for beginners**.
retrieval Mentioned
If you mean **Spotify for Creators (Anchor)**, the best alternatives in 2026 are: - **Buzzsprout** — best for beginners and simple workflows; offers podcast website, advanced stats, transcripts, and easy migration. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Transistor** — best for indie teams and multiple shows; it supports multiple podcasts/private podcasts, RSS feeds, a podcast website, and analytics. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/?utm_source=openai)) - **Captivate** — best for growth-focused podcasters; it includes unlimited uploads/storage on all plans and a 30-day free trial, with plans starting at $17/month billed yearly. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **RSS.com** — best budget-friendly all-rounder; it has a free tier with unlimited episodes and storage, plus automatic distribution to major platforms. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — best if you want monetization and a broader feature set; its plans include a custom podcast site, analytics, distribution, and monetization tools. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting-pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** — best for long-running, established shows; it’s one of the oldest hosts and emphasizes distribution and monetization tools. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/blog/thoughtsfromapage?utm_source=openai)) **Quick picks:** - **Easiest:** Buzzsprout - **Best for teams:** Transistor - **Best free option:** RSS.com or Spotify for Creators - **Best for monetization:** Podbean or Libsyn ([rss.com](https://rss.com/blog/free-vs-paid-podcast-hosting-why-would-anyone-ever-pay/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down to **best free**, **best cheap**, or **best for private podcasts**.
Which podcast hosting platform is better for beginners or advanced creators? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
**For beginners:** **Buzzsprout** or **Spotify for Creators** - **Buzzsprout**: easiest setup, clean dashboard, great support, simple monetization. - **Spotify for Creators**: free, very easy to start, good if you want the fastest launch. **For advanced creators:** **Transistor**, **Captivate**, or **Libsyn** - **Transistor**: best for multiple shows, teams, and private podcasts. - **Captivate**: strong growth tools, audience analytics, and marketing features. - **Libsyn**: very established, solid for serious podcasters and heavy publishing. **Quick pick:** - **Best beginner choice:** **Buzzsprout** - **Best advanced choice:** **Transistor** If you want, I can also rank them by **price, analytics, monetization, or ease of use**.
retrieval Mentioned
**Short answer:** - **Beginners:** **Spotify for Creators** or **Buzzsprout**. - **Advanced creators:** **Libsyn**, **Transistor**, or **Captivate**. Why: - **Spotify for Creators** is **free hosting** with distribution, analytics, comments, monetization, and video tools. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** is very beginner-friendly, with a **free plan** to test things out and simple month-to-month pricing. Its free plan includes **2 hours per cycle** and hosts episodes for **90 days**. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/231-what-is-included-in-the-free-plan?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** is better for more serious podcasters: it offers **IAB stats**, monetization tools, team support, and plans like **Basic ($12)** and **Advanced ($25)**. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/3/plans-and-pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Transistor** is strong for advanced users who want **unlimited podcasts**, **team members**, **API access**, and **advanced analytics**. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/?utm_source=openai)) - **Captivate** is also aimed at growth-focused creators and offers a **30-day free trial** plus full-access analytics. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - If you’re **just starting**: **Spotify for Creators** if you want free, or **Buzzsprout** if you want the easiest paid beginner experience. - If you’re **advanced**: **Transistor** if you want clean workflows and team features, or **Libsyn** if monetization and deep podcasting features matter most. If you want, I can give you a **1-line recommendation based on your budget, audience size, and whether you do video**.
What are the best alternatives to a podcast platform with strong analytics? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are strong alternatives if you want **podcast hosting + solid analytics**: 1. **Captivate** - Best for: growth-focused creators - Strong analytics, listener funnels, conversion tracking, smart links 2. **Simplecast** - Best for: detailed episode analytics - Clean dashboard, audience trends, downloads, geo/device data 3. **Transistor** - Best for: teams and branded shows - Good analytics, multiple shows, private podcasts, easy sharing 4. **Buzzsprout** - Best for: ease of use - Reliable analytics, episode performance, listener location/device info 5. **Podbean** - Best for: all-in-one hosting + monetization - Solid stats, live streaming, ads, paid podcasts 6. **Libsyn** - Best for: long-time podcasters - Very robust reporting, good for established shows and networks 7. **Acast** - Best for: monetization + audience insights - Strong for ad-supported podcasts and campaign-level analytics 8. **Spotify for Podcasters** - Best for: free hosting and basic analytics - Good if you’re starting out, but analytics are less advanced than Captivate/Simplecast **My quick picks:** - **Best overall analytics:** Captivate - **Best for simplicity:** Buzzsprout - **Best for teams:** Transistor - **Best for advanced reporting:** Simplecast - **Best for monetization:** Acast or Podbean If you want, I can narrow this down by **budget**, **team size**, or **whether you need private podcast hosting**.
retrieval Mentioned
If “strong analytics” is the priority, I’d shortlist these podcast hosts: - **Captivate** — strong choice if you want deep, IAB-certified analytics, including listener behavior, episode comparisons, and web player analytics. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/feature-focus/podcast-analytics?utm_source=openai)) - **Transistor** — best for clean, exportable analytics: episode performance, estimated subscribers, app/device breakdowns, listener map, and CSV exports. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/features/podcast-analytics-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** — a solid veteran option with IAB-certified measurement and “in-depth” stats for episode/show performance. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/blog/libsyn-earns-iab-2-1-certification-setting-the-standard-in-podcast-measurement/?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — good if you want IAB-certified stats plus hosting extras; it also supports tracking for download, listener, and ad delivery metrics. ([help.podbean.com](https://help.podbean.com/support/solutions/articles/25000023547-are-podbean-statistics-iab-certified-?utm_source=openai)) - **Acast** — strongest if monetization is part of the plan; it offers real-time listener analytics plus revenue dashboards. ([acast.com](https://www.acast.com/en-us?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — simpler, but still has advanced analytics with IAB-certified stats, episode pacing, and directory-level stats links. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/22-play?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall analytics:** Captivate - **Best all-around dashboard:** Transistor - **Best for monetization + analytics:** Acast - **Best budget-friendly with decent analytics:** Buzzsprout If you want, I can turn this into a **top 3 recommendation based on your budget, team size, and whether you need monetization or just reporting**.
How do podcast hosting platforms compare for distribution features? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here’s the short version: most good podcast hosts publish an RSS feed, but they differ in **how much distribution they automate** and **which platforms they submit to for you**. ### Quick compare (distribution-focused) | Host | Distribution features | Best for | |---|---|---| | **Buzzsprout** | Easy directory submission, strong support docs, good Apple/Spotify setup | Beginners who want simplicity | | **Libsyn** | Very broad directory support, reliable RSS control, manual/advanced distribution options | Established podcasters | | **Transistor** | Multiple private/public shows, easy team setup, solid Spotify/Apple distribution | Networks, brands, private feeds | | **Captivate** | Strong website + distribution workflow, good growing-show tools | Growth-focused indie podcasters | | **Podbean** | Wide directory distribution, live streaming, podcast app ecosystem | All-in-one creators | | **RSS.com** | Very simple setup, automatic submissions, clean distribution process | Beginners and budget-conscious users | | **Spreaker** | Good built-in distribution, live audio features, solid Spotify/Apple support | Live + podcast hybrid creators | | **Acast** | Strong marketplace/ad distribution, good listener network, monetization-first | Shows wanting monetization and reach | | **Simplecast** | Clean distribution to major platforms, strong analytics, team tools | Professional teams/brands | | **Spotify for Creators** | Very easy Spotify distribution; RSS distribution to other apps is basic compared with dedicated hosts | Spotify-first creators | ### What to look for in distribution - **Automatic submission** to Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube Music, etc. - **One-click directory setup** - **RSS feed control** (important if you want portability) - **Private podcast distribution** if you need internal feeds - **Multi-show management** for networks/brands ### Best picks by need - **Easiest overall:** **Buzzsprout** or **RSS.com** - **Best control + reliability:** **Libsyn** - **Best for brands/networks:** **Transistor** or **Simplecast** - **Best monetization/distribution ecosystem:** **Acast** - **Best all-in-one live + podcast:** **Podbean** or **Spreaker** If you want, I can also give you a **“best for beginners / best for pros / best for YouTube + Spotify”** ranking.
retrieval Mentioned
Here’s the practical difference in **distribution features**: | Platform | Distribution style | Notable distribution features | |---|---|---| | **Spotify for Creators** | Great for Spotify-first publishing, but you must submit to other services separately | Auto-publishes on Spotify; outside Spotify, you submit yourself to Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, etc.; video episodes stay Spotify-only; RSS feed available for elsewhere. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/na-en/creators/article/distributing-your-show-to-other-platforms/?utm_source=openai)) | | **Buzzsprout** | Strong “submit once, distribute broadly” host | Helps get listed in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, Amazon Music, iHeartRadio, TuneIn, Alexa, Overcast, Pocket Casts, Castro, Castbox, Podchaser, and more. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/features?utm_source=openai)) | | **Libsyn** | Broad directory coverage + app/network options | Says it distributes to Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, and 20+ additional platforms; also offers its own network app (“The Podcast Source”). ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/libsyn-podcast-hosting-features/?utm_source=openai)) | | **Captivate** | Broad automated directory distribution | Lists Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, Podchaser, Overcast, Pocket Casts, Castro, Gaana, JioSaavn, Podcast Addict, Player FM, Deezer, Boomplay, and Goodpods, with a 1-click “Submit to All” for automated directories. ([help.captivate.fm](https://help.captivate.fm/en/articles/4550833-distribution-faqs?utm_source=openai)) | | **Podbean** | Broad distribution + strong social/YouTube support | Supports Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeartRadio, YouTube, Listen Notes, Podcast Addict, Deezer, Pandora, Audacy, and more; also supports social auto-sharing and YouTube-related workflows. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting?utm_source=openai)) | **Quick take:** - **Best “set it and forget it” distribution:** Captivate, Buzzsprout, Libsyn, Podbean. ([help.captivate.fm](https://help.captivate.fm/en/articles/4550833-distribution-faqs?utm_source=openai)) - **Best if you care most about Spotify-native features:** Spotify for Creators. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Best if you want lots of directories plus your own branded app/network exposure:** Libsyn. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/network-app-listing-the-podcast-source/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best platform by use case”** shortlist.
Which podcast hosting platform is better for free plans versus paid plans? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For **free plans**, **Spotify for Podcasters** is usually the best overall: - **$0** - Unlimited hosting/distribution - Easy to use - Best if you’re starting out **Podbean Free** is another decent free option, but it’s more limited. For **paid plans**, the best picks are usually: - **Buzzsprout** — best all-around for most creators - **Transistor** — best for teams/multiple shows - **Captivate** — great growth tools - **Libsyn** — best for long-running, serious podcasters **Quick rule:** - **Free:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Paid:** Buzzsprout (most people), Transistor (teams), Libsyn (enterprise-style reliability) If you want, I can give you a **best platform by budget** or **by features** comparison.
retrieval Mentioned
**Best for free:** **Spotify for Creators**. It offers **free hosting**, **unlimited hosting**, and distribution everywhere, so it’s the strongest true free option. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) **Free alternatives:** - **Buzzsprout**: free plan is more of a starter/trial—**2 hours per cycle** and episodes stay up for **90 days**. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/231-what-is-included-in-the-free-plan?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean**: free account includes **5 hours** of storage and **100GB monthly bandwidth**, with other limits. ([help.podbean.com](https://help.podbean.com/support/solutions/articles/25000019893-basic-free-plan-features?utm_source=openai)) **Best for paid:** depends on your needs, but my quick pick is **Libsyn** for a straightforward paid host, and **Transistor** if you want teams/multiple shows. - **Libsyn** starts at **$12/month** after a **30-day free trial**. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/3/plans-and-pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Transistor** starts at **$19/month** and includes **unlimited podcasts** and **team members**. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **Bottom line:** - **Free:** Spotify for Creators - **Paid:** Libsyn (best value/simple), Transistor (best for teams/multi-show) ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **best host by use case** (beginners, monetization, video, private podcasts, lowest cost).
What are the best alternatives to a podcast hosting platform with monetization tools? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are the best alternatives if you want **podcast hosting + monetization tools**: 1. **Buzzsprout** - Best for: ease of use - Monetization: Buzzsprout Ads, affiliate links - Good if you want a clean dashboard and simple setup 2. **Libsyn** - Best for: serious podcasters and long-term hosting - Monetization: private podcasting, dynamic ad insertion, premium content - Strong distribution and reliable analytics 3. **Podbean** - Best for: all-in-one monetization - Monetization: ads, listener support, premium subscriptions, patron-style plans - One of the most feature-packed options 4. **Captivate** - Best for: growth-focused creators - Monetization: paid memberships, private feeds, donations, sponsorship tools - Nice if you want marketing + monetization together 5. **Transistor** - Best for: branded podcasts and teams - Monetization: private podcasts, dynamic ads via integrations - Great for multiple shows and professional workflows 6. **Spreaker** - Best for: built-in ad monetization - Monetization: ad marketplace, listener support, subscriptions - Good choice if you want monetization baked in 7. **Acast** - Best for: ad revenue and network-style monetization - Monetization: dynamic ad insertion, sponsorships, premium subscriptions - Strong if you expect to scale audience revenue **Quick picks:** - **Easiest:** Buzzsprout - **Best monetization tools:** Podbean - **Best for teams/brands:** Transistor - **Best for ads:** Acast or Spreaker If you want, I can also narrow this down by **budget**, **download volume**, or **whether you want ads vs paid subscriptions**.
retrieval Mentioned
If you want a podcast host with monetization built in, the strongest alternatives right now are: - **Captivate** — best for memberships, tips, and ad tools on every plan. It offers subscription memberships, listener tips, and ad/network monetization features. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/feature-focus/podcast-monetization?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — best for all-in-one monetization, especially ads and premium content. Podbean has an ads marketplace, dynamic ad insertion, live-stream monetization, and premium podcast sales. ([sponsorship.podbean.com](https://sponsorship.podbean.com/podcasters?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — best for simplicity with monetization add-ons. Buzzsprout supports listener support, subscriptions, and Buzzsprout Ads; the free plan is limited, but monetization is available on paid plans. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/231-what-is-included-in-the-free-plan?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** — best for more advanced/pro creators. Libsyn offers ad monetization, Apple Podcasts Subscriptions integration, and Podroll/other monetization options. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/libsynpro-enterprise-podcasting/?utm_source=openai)) - **Spotify for Creators** — best if you’re okay being centered on Spotify’s ecosystem. It includes hosting, analytics, subscriptions, and the Spotify Partner Program, but some monetization features require eligibility and are limited to select markets. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/monetization?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall monetization:** Podbean - **Best memberships/tips:** Captivate - **Best easy-to-use option:** Buzzsprout - **Best for pro/scale:** Libsyn - **Best free host with monetization:** Spotify for Creators ([sponsorship.podbean.com](https://sponsorship.podbean.com/podcasters?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best 3 for your budget and audience size**.
Which podcast hosting platform is better for small teams versus solo creators? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
**Solo creators:** - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free, simple, good for getting started. - **Buzzsprout** — very beginner-friendly, polished, great if you want ease over advanced features. **Small teams:** - **Transistor** — one of the best for teams; supports multiple shows, team access, and cleaner collaboration. - **Captivate** — strong team/workflow features and good growth tools. - **Libsyn** — solid if you want a more established, feature-rich host. **Quick pick:** - **Solo:** *Buzzsprout* - **Small team:** *Transistor* If you want, I can also compare **price**, **analytics**, and **distribution** for the top 3.
retrieval Not mentioned
**Short answer:** - **Solo creator:** **Spotify for Creators** or **Buzzsprout**. Spotify is free with hosting, distribution, analytics, comments, and monetization tools; Buzzsprout is simple and also offers unlimited team members if you later grow. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Small team:** **Transistor** or **RSS.com**. Transistor includes unlimited team members/collaborators on all plans; RSS.com’s higher tiers include unlimited team seats and up to 3 collaborators on the lower team plan. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - If you’re **solo and cost-sensitive**: **Spotify for Creators**. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - If you’re a **small team that needs collaboration**: **Transistor**. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **best platform by budget** list too.
What are the best alternatives to a podcast hosting service with easy setup? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **easy setup**, the best podcast hosting alternatives are: - **Spotify for Podcasters** — easiest to start, free, good for beginners - **Buzzsprout** — very user-friendly, polished dashboard, great support - **Podbean** — simple setup, solid all-in-one hosting and monetization - **Transistor** — clean interface, great if you want multiple shows - **Captivate** — easy launch tools, good analytics, more pro-focused - **RSS.com** — straightforward, affordable, quick to publish **Best pick by need:** - **Simplest/free:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Best beginner-friendly paid option:** Buzzsprout - **Best all-around value:** Podbean - **Best for growing shows:** Transistor If you want, I can also recommend the **best one for your budget** or compare **free vs paid** options.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **easy setup**, these are the best podcast-hosting alternatives to look at: - **Spotify for Creators** — free, simple to start, and good if you want the easiest path from signup to publishing; it supports audio/video podcasts and can distribute your show to other platforms after the first episode is live. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/creators/article/adding-a-new-show/?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — very beginner-friendly, with one-click Apple Podcasts submission, simple embeds, transcripts, and a clean hosting dashboard. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/210-submitting-to-apple-podcasts?utm_source=openai)) - **RSS.com** — strong “set it and forget it” option: automatic distribution to major apps, unlimited episodes, and a free plan. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/podcasts/porsesh/2063915/?utm_source=openai)) - **Transistor** — great if you want a polished host with an easy website builder built into the dashboard; you can also generate a site from an RSS feed. ([support.transistor.fm](https://support.transistor.fm/en/article/how-to-create-a-free-website-for-your-podcast-1l2i6v0/?utm_source=openai)) - **Captivate** — a good choice if you want simple setup plus growth/monetization tools, with a free trial and easy directory submission. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Absolute easiest/free:** Spotify for Creators or RSS.com. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/creators/article/adding-a-new-show/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best all-around beginner host:** Buzzsprout. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **the best free option**, **cheapest paid option**, or **best for WordPress**.
How do I choose a podcast hosting platform for RSS distribution? problem
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Choose a podcast host by comparing these: - **RSS control**: you own the feed, can move it, and can customize title/artwork/categories. - **Distribution**: one-click or easy submission to Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube Music, Amazon, etc. - **Analytics**: downloads, geography, apps, episode trends, and ideally IAB-certified stats. - **Storage/bandwidth limits**: make sure it can handle your upload size and expected downloads. - **Monetization**: ads, subscriptions, paid episodes, donations, dynamic insertion. - **Website/player**: embeddable player, show page, episode pages, transcripts. - **Support/migration**: easy import/export, redirects, and good customer support. - **Pricing**: per month, per episode, or based on storage/downloads. ### Good podcast hosts to consider - **Buzzsprout** – easiest for beginners, very polished, great support. - **Libsyn** – strong for serious podcasters, solid RSS control and monetization. - **Transistor** – great for teams/brands, multiple shows, clean analytics. - **Captivate** – good marketing tools, private podcasts, growth features. - **Podbean** – budget-friendly, monetization options, live streaming. - **RSS.com** – simple pricing, unlimited uploads on many plans, beginner-friendly. - **Acast** – good for monetization and larger audiences. ### Quick picks - **Beginner / easiest:** Buzzsprout - **Best all-around control:** Libsyn - **Best for brands/teams:** Transistor - **Best budget option:** Podbean or RSS.com If you want, I can give you a **host comparison table** based on your budget and whether you care most about analytics, monetization, or simplicity.
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Choose a podcast host by how well it handles your **RSS feed** and the boring-but-important stuff around it: feed reliability, distribution, analytics, monetization, migration, and support. Your host creates or exposes the RSS feed that directories read, and Apple says the feed must meet technical requirements and be publicly accessible. ([podcasters.apple.com](https://podcasters.apple.com/support/823-podcast-requirements?utm_source=openai)) **What to compare** - **RSS control:** Can you easily get the feed URL, edit metadata, and redirect it if you switch hosts? Spotify and Buzzsprout both document feed access/updates, and Spotify notes you’ll need to submit to other platforms yourself. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/us/creators/article/your-rss-feed/?utm_source=openai)) - **Distribution workflow:** Some hosts help you submit to major directories, but you still want to own the RSS feed. Apple supports RSS-hosted shows submitted through Apple Podcasts Connect. ([podcasters.apple.com](https://podcasters.apple.com/support/897-submit-a-show?utm_source=openai)) - **Analytics:** Look for IAB-style stats if you care about measurement; Libsyn advertises IAB-certified analytics on its plans. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/3/plans-and-pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Monetization:** If you want ads or paid subs, compare built-in tools; Libsyn and Buzzsprout both advertise monetization features. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/3/plans-and-pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Migration support:** Make sure the host can redirect an existing RSS feed cleanly if you move later. Buzzsprout documents feed redirects from other hosts. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/56-redirect-podcast-feed?utm_source=openai)) - **Policy/privacy:** Spotify notes your email may become public in the RSS feed when you enable it. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/us/creators/article/your-rss-feed/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb** - **Beginner / simple audio podcast:** Buzzsprout or Spotify for Creators. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Growth + monetization + deeper stats:** Libsyn. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/3/plans-and-pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **You care most about portability:** pick the host that makes RSS export/redirect easiest. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/56-redirect-podcast-feed?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **3-host shortlist** based on your budget, episode length, and whether you need video, ads, or subscriptions.
How do I get my podcast on all major listening apps? problem
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
To get your podcast on all major listening apps, you usually need **one podcast host** plus **directory submissions**. ### 1) Pick a podcast hosting platform This creates your RSS feed and stores your audio. Good options: - **Buzzsprout** - **Libsyn** - **Captivate** - **Transistor** - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) ### 2) Submit your RSS feed to the big apps/directories Most apps pull from your RSS feed or a directory. Start with: - **Apple Podcasts** — submit via **Apple Podcasts Connect** - **Spotify** — submit through **Spotify for Creators** or import your RSS - **YouTube Music** — upload via YouTube’s podcast tools - **Amazon Music / Audible** - **Pocket Casts** - **Overcast** - **Podcast Addict** - **TuneIn** ### 3) Make sure your feed is valid Your host should generate: - podcast title - artwork (usually **3000 x 3000** JPG/PNG) - episode titles/descriptions - explicit content tag - category ### 4) Publish your first few episodes Many directories prefer you have at least 1–3 episodes live before approval. ### 5) Promote and keep updating the feed Once listed, every new episode in your host automatically appears in the apps. ### Fastest route If you want the simplest setup: **Buzzsprout + Apple Podcasts + Spotify + YouTube Music** is a very common combo. If you want, I can give you a **step-by-step setup for your exact host**.
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The short version: **use one podcast host + an RSS feed**, then submit that feed to each major app/directory. Spotify does **not** distribute to other platforms for you, and Apple requires submission through Apple Podcasts Connect. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/na-en/creators/article/distributing-your-show-to-other-platforms/?utm_source=openai)) **How to do it** 1. **Choose a podcast host** (e.g. Buzzsprout, Libsyn, Podbean, Spotify for Creators). Your host gives you the RSS feed that all apps read from. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/to/creators/article/your-rss-feed/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Make sure your feed is public and valid**. Apple requires an Apple Podcasts Connect account and says shows must pass technical validation/review. ([podcasters.apple.com](https://podcasters.apple.com/support/897-submit-a-show?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Submit your RSS feed to the big apps/directories**: - **Apple Podcasts**: add the RSS feed in Apple Podcasts Connect. ([podcasters.apple.com](https://podcasters.apple.com/support/897-submit-a-show?utm_source=openai)) - **Spotify**: enable your RSS feed, then submit to other platforms yourself. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/to/creators/article/your-rss-feed/?utm_source=openai)) - **YouTube Music**: you can deliver podcasts via RSS feed in supported locations, and listeners can also add RSS feeds directly. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/youtubemusic/answer/14106258?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) - **Amazon Music**: Amazon has its own podcast submission flow; creators commonly submit there separately. ([music.amazon.com](https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/9b698796-4def-4c33-ac4c-bab1957f8d6c/episodes/4415cf5e-1334-4eb6-8035-306e02aa6108/podcasting-your-way---creative-freedom-in-podcasting-3-where-to-submit-your-podcast-and-some-resources-for-you?utm_source=openai)) **Best practice:** submit once, then keep the **same RSS feed** forever. If you change hosts, update the feed carefully so all apps keep pointing to the new one. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/us/creators/article/updating-an-rss-feed-link-or-hosting-provider/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **step-by-step checklist for Apple + Spotify + YouTube Music + Amazon Music**.
How do I host my podcast files and generate an RSS feed? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
The easiest way is to use a **podcast host** that stores your audio files and automatically creates your RSS feed. ## Best podcast hosting services - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free, simple, good for beginners - **Buzzsprout** — very easy to use, polished dashboard - **Captivate** — strong for growing shows - **Transistor** — great if you want multiple shows and clean analytics - **Libsyn** — long-running, reliable, more traditional podcast host - **Podbean** — solid all-in-one option ## How it works 1. **Upload your MP3/WAV** to the podcast host 2. Add episode title, description, artwork, etc. 3. The host **generates your RSS feed automatically** 4. Submit that RSS feed to: - **Apple Podcasts** - **Spotify** - **YouTube Music** - **Amazon Music** - other directories ## If you want to self-host You can do it yourself, but it’s more work: - Host audio on **Amazon S3**, **Cloudflare R2**, or **DigitalOcean Spaces** - Generate the RSS feed with: - **WordPress + Seriously Simple Podcasting** - **Castopod** - custom XML generation This requires handling: - file storage - bandwidth - RSS formatting - enclosure links - feed validation ## Recommended path For most people: **Buzzsprout** or **Spotify for Podcasters**. If you want, I can also give you: - a **step-by-step setup** - a **cheap DIY hosting setup** - or a **comparison chart** of the best hosts.
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Simplest path: use a podcast host (e.g. Buzzsprout or Spotify for Creators). They store your audio files, create a unique RSS feed for your show, and update the feed automatically when you publish episodes. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/103-rss-feed?utm_source=openai)) If you want to self-host: 1. Put each episode audio file on a public HTTPS URL. 2. Create an RSS 2.0 XML file with one `<item>` per episode. 3. For each episode, add an `<enclosure>` with the file’s `url`, `length` in bytes, and MIME `type` (like `audio/mpeg`). ([rssboard.org](https://www.rssboard.org/rss-draft-1-17?utm_source=openai)) 4. Publish the feed at a stable URL and keep it updated when you add new episodes. ([rssboard.org](https://www.rssboard.org/rss-draft-1-17?utm_source=openai)) 5. Validate the feed with an RSS validator before submitting it to podcast directories. ([rssboard.org](https://www.rssboard.org/rss-validator/?utm_source=openai)) A good RSS feed also includes basic show metadata like title, description, and a unique identifier for each episode. Best practice is one enclosure per item. ([rssboard.org](https://www.rssboard.org/rss-draft-1-17?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you: - a **no-code setup** using a podcast host, or - a **copy-paste RSS XML template** for self-hosting.
How do I track podcast downloads and listener analytics? problem 10/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Use a podcast host + analytics stack. ## 1) Track downloads Your host usually tracks this automatically via the RSS feed. **Good options:** - **Libsyn** — solid download stats, episode trends, apps/devices - **Buzzsprout** — easy dashboards, listener geography, episode performance - **Captivate** — good audience analytics and growth tools - **Transistor** — clean analytics for multiple shows - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free, simple stats if you publish there ### What to watch - **Downloads per episode** - **Unique listeners** (if available) - **Geography** - **Apps/devices** - **Trends over time** ## 2) Understand “listener analytics” Downloads ≠ listens. For deeper insights, use platform-specific dashboards: - **Spotify for Podcasters** for Spotify listener data - **Apple Podcasts Connect** for Apple listeners - **YouTube Studio** if you publish video podcasts there These show: - plays - consumption/completion - follows/subscribes - audience retention - drop-off points ## 3) Add link tracking Use tracked links so you know where listeners come from: - **Bitly** - **Rebrandly** - **UTM parameters** + **Google Analytics** Example: `yourshow.com/episode1?utm_source=instagram&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=launch` ## 4) Get better attribution If you run ads or promotions, use a tracking service: - **Podtrac** - **Podsights** - **OP3** (open-source podcast analytics) ## 5) Set up a simple workflow 1. Pick a host like **Buzzsprout** or **Libsyn** 2. Submit your show to **Apple Podcasts**, **Spotify**, and **YouTube** 3. Use tracked links for marketing 4. Check episode stats weekly 5. Compare downloads, retention, and source traffic ## 6) Important note Only trust analytics that follow **IAB podcast measurement standards** when comparing download numbers across hosts. If you want, I can recommend the best setup for: - **beginners** - **advanced growth tracking** - **free/cheap options**
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Track it in 3 layers: 1. **Your podcast host** Use a hosting platform with analytics (e.g. Spotify for Creators, Libsyn, Buzzsprout, Captivate, Transistor). These dashboards typically show episode plays/downloads, audience, locations, devices, and retention. Spotify for Creators also lets you export analytics to CSV. ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/sm-en/podcasters/article/downloading-your-podcast-s-analytics-data/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Use a standard for “downloads”** The industry standard is the **IAB Podcast Measurement Technical Guidelines**, which define a legitimate download and recommend filtering bots/spiders so your numbers are comparable and cleaner. ([iab.com](https://www.iab.com/guidelines/podcast-measurement-guidelines/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Separate “downloads” from “listeners”** Downloads are file requests; listeners are estimated people/devices. Because a single listener may download multiple episodes, listener counts are usually inferred from IP/user-agent patterns or platform-side account data rather than counted directly from MP3 downloads. ([iab.com](https://www.iab.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/IAB_Audio_Measurement_Guide_Final.pdf?utm_source=openai)) **What to watch** - **Downloads/plays per episode** - **Unique listeners / audience size** - **Retention** (where people drop off) - **Followers/subscribers** - **Sources, devices, and geography** ([support.spotify.com](https://support.spotify.com/gw-en/podcasters/article/audience-stats/?utm_source=openai)) **Best practice** - Put every episode behind one hosting provider - Add **UTM tags** to any promo links - Export monthly CSVs and track trends in a spreadsheet or BI tool - Compare episode performance by publish date, not just total lifetime downloads If you want, I can recommend the **best podcast analytics tool for your budget and host**.
How do I monetize a podcast with ads or subscriptions? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
You can monetize a podcast two main ways: **ads** and **subscriptions**. ## 1) Monetize with ads Best if you have a consistent audience. ### Common ad types - **Pre-roll**: before the episode - **Mid-roll**: in the middle (usually pays best) - **Post-roll**: after the episode - **Host-read ads**: usually convert better and pay more than baked-in network ads ### How to do it 1. Build an audience and publish consistently. 2. Join an ad network or marketplace. 3. Add ad slots to your episodes. 4. Get paid by CPM (cost per 1,000 downloads) or flat sponsorship deals. ### Good ad platforms - **Acast** – strong for dynamic ad insertion and monetization - **Megaphone** – good for larger shows - **Spotify for Podcasters** – easy starting point if you already use Spotify - **Libsyn Ads** – solid for independent podcasters - **Podcorn** – marketplace for sponsorships and host-read ads ### Tips - Sponsorships usually start making sense once you have steady downloads. - Keep ads relevant to your audience. - Host-read ads tend to outperform generic spots. --- ## 2) Monetize with subscriptions Best if you want recurring income from loyal listeners. ### Common subscription perks - Bonus episodes - Ad-free episodes - Early access - Behind-the-scenes content - Private Q&A or community access ### How to do it 1. Pick a subscription platform. 2. Create bonus content or premium feeds. 3. Charge monthly or yearly. 4. Promote the membership in your free episodes. ### Good subscription platforms - **Patreon** – the most common choice - **Supercast** – great for private podcast feeds - **Memberful** – good if you want more control - **Spotify Subscriptions** – simple if your audience is on Spotify - **Apple Podcasts Subscriptions** – good for Apple listeners --- ## Best approach If you’re starting out: - Use **subscriptions first** if you have a small but loyal audience. - Use **ads later** when downloads grow. Many podcasts do both: - **Free feed + ads** - **Paid tier with no ads + extras** If you want, I can also suggest the **best monetization setup for your podcast size** (new, growing, or established).
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Two main ways: **1) Ads** - **Host-read sponsorships:** You read the ad yourself. Usually best for smaller podcasts because trust is high. - **Programmatic ads:** Ads inserted automatically via your host/platform. - **Direct sponsorships:** You sell ad spots to a brand yourself. **Typical ad spots** - Pre-roll: before episode - Mid-roll: in the middle - Post-roll: at end **How to get sponsors** - Grow a clear niche audience - Make a one-sheet with downloads, demographics, and ad rates - Reach out to brands that match your listeners - Join ad networks if you want easier access to buyers **2) Subscriptions** - Offer bonus episodes, early access, ad-free episodes, behind-the-scenes content, or community access. - Common tools: **Patreon**, **Spotify Subscriptions**, **Apple Podcasts Subscriptions**, **Memberful**, **Supercast**. **Best practice** - Start with ads if you already have steady downloads. - Add subscriptions if you have a loyal audience that wants extra content. **Simple monetization stack** - Free feed for everyone - 1–2 ad slots per episode - Premium tier for bonus content If you want, I can help you build a monetization plan based on your podcast size and niche.
How do I start a podcast without managing my own server? problem
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Use a **podcast hosting platform**. It stores your audio, generates your RSS feed, and sends your show to Spotify, Apple Podcasts, etc.—so you don’t manage a server. ### Good options - **Buzzsprout** — very beginner-friendly - **Transistor** — great for multiple shows/teams - **Captivate** — strong analytics and growth tools - **Podbean** — simple and affordable - **RSS.com** — easy all-in-one hosting - **Libsyn** — long-running, reliable option ### Basic setup 1. Record your episodes 2. Upload them to a hosting service 3. Fill out your show title, description, cover art, and category 4. Get your RSS feed 5. Submit that feed to: - **Apple Podcasts** - **Spotify** - **Amazon Music** - **YouTube Music** ### If you want the easiest path Start with **Buzzsprout** or **RSS.com**. ### If you want a clean pro setup Use **Transistor**. If you want, I can recommend the best host based on your budget and whether you’re solo, a business, or doing video too.
retrieval Mentioned
Use a **podcast hosting service** instead of running your own server. These services store your audio, generate your podcast’s **RSS feed**, and let Apple/Spotify and other apps pull new episodes automatically. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/103-rss-feed?utm_source=openai)) **Simple path:** 1. Pick a host: **Buzzsprout**, **Transistor**, or **Libsyn** are solid options. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) 2. Upload your episode audio and artwork. 3. Fill in your show title, description, and categories. 4. Submit the RSS feed to **Apple Podcasts** and **Spotify** once. 5. Publish new episodes in the host dashboard; the feed updates automatically. ([support.transistor.fm](https://support.transistor.fm/en/article/how-to-distribute-your-podcast-to-apple-podcasts-spotify-etc-un5fxz/?utm_source=openai)) If you want the easiest setup, I’d start with **Buzzsprout** or **Transistor**. Buzzsprout gives each podcast a unique RSS feed and a month-to-month plan, while Transistor makes distribution to major directories straightforward and supports feed redirects if you ever switch hosts. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/103-rss-feed?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **best host recommendation based on budget, privacy, or video podcasting**.
How do I move my podcast to a new hosting platform? problem
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Moving a podcast to a new host is mostly about **keeping the same RSS feed audience-facing** while changing where the audio is stored. ### Simple migration steps 1. **Choose the new host** - Popular options: **Buzzsprout**, **Transistor**, **Libsyn**, **Captivate**, **Podbean**, **Spotify for Creators**. 2. **Import your podcast** - Most hosts let you import via RSS or CSV. - Make sure all **episode titles, descriptions, artwork, and publish dates** come over correctly. 3. **Upload or transfer audio files** - Either re-upload your MP3s to the new host or use their migration tool if offered. 4. **Verify your new RSS feed** - Check that the feed works and that new episodes appear correctly in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, etc. 5. **Set up a 301 redirect from your old feed** - This is the key step. - A **301 redirect** tells podcast apps to follow your new feed automatically. - Many hosts, like **Libsyn** and **Buzzsprout**, support this. 6. **Update podcast directories if needed** - Usually the redirect handles this, but you may need to manually update: - **Apple Podcasts Connect** - **Spotify for Creators** - **YouTube Music / Google Podcasts replacements** - **Amazon Music** 7. **Test everything** - Subscribe to your show in a few apps and confirm new episodes show up. ### Important tips - **Don’t delete the old feed too soon.** - **Keep redirects active for at least 6–12 months**, longer if possible. - **Analytics may reset or change** when moving hosts. - If you use **paid memberships, dynamic ads, or private feeds**, check those settings carefully before switching. ### Easiest migration-friendly hosts - **Buzzsprout** — very beginner-friendly - **Libsyn** — strong for long-term podcasting - **Transistor** — good for teams and multiple shows - **Captivate** — good marketing tools - **Podbean** — good all-in-one option If you want, I can give you a **step-by-step migration checklist** for your current host and the one you’re moving to.
retrieval Mentioned
1. **Pick the new host** and create an account. 2. **Export your podcast** from the old host: - RSS feed URL - audio files (if needed) - episode titles/descriptions/artwork - analytics or back catalog info 3. **Import or recreate the show** on the new platform. 4. **Upload your old episodes** if the new host doesn’t mirror them automatically. 5. **Set up the 301 redirect** from your old RSS feed to the new one. This is the key step that moves subscribers. 6. **Update your podcast directory links** if your new host doesn’t handle this automatically: - Apple Podcasts - Spotify - YouTube Music - Amazon Music, etc. 7. **Test the new feed** in podcast apps before fully switching. 8. **Keep the old host active** for a few weeks/months so listeners can migrate smoothly. **Important:** don’t delete the old feed until you’re sure the redirect is working and new episodes are appearing on the new host. If you want, I can give you a **platform-by-platform migration checklist** for hosts like **Libsyn, Buzzsprout, Anchor/Spotify for Podcasters, Transistor, Captivate, or Podbean**.
How do I set up a private podcast for members or employees? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A private podcast is usually just a feed that only approved people can access. The simplest setup: ## 1) Pick a private podcast host Use a service that supports private RSS feeds + access control. Good options: - **Spotify for Podcasters** (free/basic, but less “private-membership” focused) - **Buzzsprout** with **Private Podcasting** - **Transistor** with **Private Podcasting** - **Supercast** (great for memberships/subscribers) - **Hello Audio** (good for courses/internal training) - **Captivate** (private podcast features) ## 2) Upload your episodes Record your audio, then upload MP3s to the host. Add: - title - cover art - episode notes - release schedule ## 3) Create a private feed The platform will generate: - a **private RSS feed** - unique listener links, or - email-based invitations For employees, choose a system with **automatic user access** and easy revocation. ## 4) Give access to members/employees Common ways: - **Invite by email** - **Share private RSS links** - **Password-protected page** - **SSO / company login** if using enterprise tools If you’re doing internal company podcasts, consider: - **Hello Audio** - **Transistor** - **Captivate** For a member community: - **Supercast** - **Buzzsprout** ## 5) Tell listeners how to subscribe Private feeds don’t always work in every app automatically. Give instructions for: - **Apple Podcasts** - **Pocket Casts** - **Overcast** - **Spotify** (sometimes limited for private RSS) A good host will provide one-click subscribe links. ## 6) Control who stays in Make sure you can: - remove access instantly - expire links - rotate feeds if needed - track listens/downloads ## 7) If you want the easiest setup For a small team or membership: - **Buzzsprout Private Podcasting** is very straightforward - **Supercast** is best for paid memberships - **Hello Audio** is great for internal training or course delivery If you want, I can recommend the best setup based on whether this is for **employees, paid members, or course students**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use a **private podcast host**, not a public podcast directory. The basic setup is: upload episodes to the host, create a private/unlisted feed, invite members/employees, and have them subscribe in a podcast app. For employee/internal use, **SSO/login-based access** is better than a shareable RSS link because it lets you remove access when someone leaves. ([blog.podbean.com](https://blog.podbean.com/how-to-create-a-podcast-for-internal-communications-protectedprivate-content/)) **Good options:** - **Podbean** — built for private podcasts, with member controls, private groups, and **SSO login** on business/enterprise plans. ([api.podbean.com](https://api.podbean.com/enterprise/pricing)) - **Supercast** — creates a **unique podcast feed** for subscribers and supports common podcast apps. ([premium.supercast.com](https://premium.supercast.com/)) - **Transistor** — offers **unlisted/private podcasts** hidden from public directories. ([support.transistor.fm](https://support.transistor.fm/en/article/how-to-use-the-unlisted-podcasts-feature-5kax2i/)) **Simple setup checklist** 1. Pick a host with private-feed or SSO support. ([api.podbean.com](https://api.podbean.com/enterprise/pricing)) 2. Create your show/private channel. ([api.podbean.com](https://api.podbean.com/enterprise/pricing)) 3. Upload episodes. ([blog.podbean.com](https://blog.podbean.com/create-securely-host-corporate-podcast-podbean-2025/amp/?utm_source=openai)) 4. Add members/employees by email or SSO. ([blog.podbean.com](https://blog.podbean.com/how-to-create-a-podcast-for-internal-communications-protectedprivate-content/?utm_source=openai)) 5. Send them the private feed or login link. ([premium.supercast.com](https://premium.supercast.com/)) 6. Tell them to add it in Apple Podcasts or another app that supports private feeds. Apple Podcasts can follow a show by URL; Spotify does **not** support manual RSS feed entry. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/add-podcast/)) **My recommendation:** - **Employees / internal comms:** Podbean Enterprise if you want SSO and access control. ([api.podbean.com](https://api.podbean.com/enterprise/pricing)) - **Paid members / community:** Supercast if you want a polished subscriber feed. ([premium.supercast.com](https://premium.supercast.com/)) - **Small team / quick launch:** Transistor unlisted feed if you just need something simple. ([support.transistor.fm](https://support.transistor.fm/en/article/how-to-use-the-unlisted-podcasts-feature-5kax2i/)) If you want, I can turn this into a **step-by-step setup for Podbean, Supercast, or Transistor**.
How do I keep my podcast feed from breaking when I change hosts? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
To keep your podcast feed from breaking when you change hosts: 1. **Keep the same RSS feed URL if possible** Best case: move the feed contents to the new host without changing the public feed address. 2. **Use a host that supports feed redirects** If the URL must change, set up a **301 redirect** from the old feed to the new one. Good options: **Libsyn**, **Captivate**, **Buzzsprout**, **Transistor**, and **Spotify for Creators** all support migrations/redirects in some form. 3. **Don’t change your episode GUIDs** The GUID is what apps use to recognize episodes. Changing it can cause duplicates or lost play progress. 4. **Keep episode file URLs stable during the switch** Ideally, the audio files should keep the same URLs or be redirected too. 5. **Validate the new feed before flipping it live** Test it in: - **Apple Podcasts Connect** - **Spotify for Creators** - **Podbase** or **Cast Feed Validator** 6. **Update DNS carefully if you use a custom domain** If your feed is on `podcast.yourdomain.com`, you can point that domain to the new host so subscribers never see a different address. 7. **Keep the old host active for a while** Leave the old feed and redirects in place for at least **90 days**. If you want, tell me your current host and new host, and I’ll give you a migration checklist for that exact setup.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use a **feed URL you control**, and make the new host match the old feed as closely as possible. ### Do this: - **Keep the same RSS feed URL** if at all possible. - If you must change it, use a **301 redirect** from the old feed to the new one. - **Keep episode GUIDs the same** so apps don’t think episodes are new. - Preserve: - episode order - pub dates - titles/descriptions - enclosure URLs if possible - Leave the old feed live for a while. - Verify the new feed in major apps/directories before fully switching. ### Biggest mistake: Changing hosts **and** changing the feed URL without redirecting. That’s what usually breaks subscriptions. ### Best practice: Use a **domain you own** for the feed, like: - `https://podcast.yourdomain.com/feed.xml` Then when you change hosts, you only update where that domain points. ### If your host gives you a new feed: - Set the old one to **redirect** - Submit the new feed in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, etc. if needed - Watch downloads/subscribers for a few weeks If you want, I can give you a **host migration checklist** or help with **Apple Podcasts / Spotify / RSS-specific steps**.
How do I publish podcast episodes automatically to multiple directories? problem
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
The simplest way is to use a **podcast hosting platform** that automatically generates an **RSS feed** and then submit that feed to each directory once. ### Best setup 1. **Upload your episode** to a host like: - **Buzzsprout** - **Libsyn** - **Podbean** - **Captivate** - **Spotify for Podcasters** 2. The host publishes the episode to your **RSS feed** automatically. 3. Submit that RSS feed to directories like: - **Apple Podcasts** - **Spotify** - **Amazon Music / Audible** - **YouTube Music** - **Pocket Casts** - **Overcast** - **Castbox** - **iHeartRadio** After setup, every new episode you upload is sent to all directories automatically. ### If you want “one-click” distribution Use a host with built-in syndication, like: - **Podbean** - **Captivate** - **Buzzsprout** ### If you want more control/automation You can automate publishing with: - **Zapier** - **Make** - **RSS.app** - **Podcastle** or **Descript** for production, then upload to your host ### Important note Most directories do **not** accept direct episode uploads. They pull episodes from your **RSS feed**, so the host is the key. If you want, I can recommend the **best podcast host for your budget and workflow**.
retrieval Mentioned
Use a podcast host + RSS feed, then let directories ingest it automatically. **Typical setup** 1. **Upload episode** to your podcast host Examples: **Buzzsprout, Libsyn, Spotify for Creators, Transistor, Captivate**. 2. **Set metadata** Title, description, artwork, explicit flag, season/episode number, publishing date. 3. **Publish the episode** Your host updates your **RSS feed** automatically. 4. **Submit your RSS feed once** to each directory Examples: **Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, Pocket Casts, Overcast**. 5. **Keep the feed stable** Future episodes sync to directories automatically when the RSS feed updates. **If you want true automation** - Use a host with: - scheduled publishing - API access or Zapier/Make integration - automatic cross-posting or distribution tools - You can wire workflows like: - **Dropbox/Google Drive → podcast host → RSS → directories** - **Descript/Auphonic → host → directories** **Important** - Most directories do **not** want separate uploads every time. - They usually pull from **one canonical RSS feed**. - If you change hosts, keep redirects or you may break subscriptions. **Best practice** - Make **your podcast host** the source of truth. - Treat directories as **syndication endpoints**, not places you manually publish to. If you want, I can give you: - a **no-code workflow** - a **cheap setup** - or a **fully automated Zapier/Make workflow**.
What is the pricing for podcast hosting platforms? transactional 20/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Podcast hosting pricing usually falls into a few buckets: - **Free / starter**: **$0–$15/mo** - Examples: **Spotify for Podcasters** (free), **Buzzsprout** free plan, **Podbean** basic/free tiers - Good for testing, but often has upload limits or fewer features - **Small creator plans**: **$10–$25/mo** - Examples: **Buzzsprout** ($12+/mo), **Captivate** (starts around $19/mo), **Transistor** (starts around $19/mo) - Usually includes unlimited episodes or higher storage, basic analytics, RSS hosting - **Growing shows / pro plans**: **$25–$100+/mo** - Examples: **Libsyn** (starts around $7–$15/mo, higher tiers scale up), **Podbean** ($14–$99/mo), **Castos** ($19+/mo) - Better analytics, private podcasts, dynamic ad tools, multiple shows, team access - **Network / enterprise**: **$100+/mo** - Examples: **Transistor**, **Megaphone**, **Acast** premium solutions - Designed for larger catalogs, monetization, advanced reporting, multiple users A few common examples: - **Buzzsprout**: about **$12, $18, or $24/mo** depending on upload hours - **Transistor**: about **$19, $49, $99/mo** - **Captivate**: about **$19, $49, $99/mo** - **Podbean**: often **free**, then around **$14, $39, $79+/mo** - **Libsyn**: entry plans are low, then increase based on storage/uploads If you want, I can also compare **the best hosting platforms for beginners, monetization, or large shows**.
retrieval Mentioned
Podcast hosting pricing varies a lot, but the current market roughly looks like this: - **Free**: Spotify for Creators offers free hosting; RSS.com also has a free plan. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Budget paid plans**: RSS.com starts at **$11.99/month billed annually**, Libsyn starts at **$12/month**, and Buzzsprout has paid tiers but its pricing page is best checked directly because it’s plan-based. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mid-tier**: Transistor starts at **$19/month**, and Captivate starts at **$17/month billed yearly**. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Higher-end**: Transistor’s top standard tier is **$99/month**, Libsyn’s Max plan is **$150/month**, and Captivate’s higher tiers go up from there. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **side-by-side comparison of the best podcast hosts by price, features, and limits**.
Are there free podcast hosting platforms? transactional 1,600/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes — a few **free podcast hosting platforms** exist, though most have limits on storage, bandwidth, or features. Good free options: - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free hosting/distribution, easy to use - **RedCircle** — free hosting with monetization options - **Spreaker** — free tier available, limited upload/storage - **Podbean** — has a free starter plan with restrictions - **Buzzsprout** — not fully free long-term, but offers a limited free trial If you want the simplest truly free option, **Spotify for Creators** is usually the best place to start. If you want, I can also compare the best free podcast hosts for **beginners**, **monetization**, or **largest storage**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes. A few current options include: - **Spotify for Creators** — offers **free podcast hosting** and distribution. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **RSS.com** — says it has a **free podcast hosting** plan with unlimited episodes/storage and automatic distribution. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/podcasts/suncoaches/1454705/?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — says it offers a **free podcast hosting service**, though its paid plans add more features. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/site?utm_source=openai)) Quick caveat: “free” plans usually come with limits on monetization, storage, analytics, or branding. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also compare the best free options for **beginner**, **small audience**, or **best overall**.
What is the cheapest podcast hosting platform? transactional 50/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
The **cheapest podcast hosting platform is usually Spotify for Podcasters** — it’s **free**. Other very low-cost options: - **RedCircle** — free hosting - **Buzzsprout** — starts at **$12/month** - **Captivate** — starts at **$19/month** - **Podbean** — starts at **$9/month** If you want **the absolute cheapest**, go with **Spotify for Podcasters**. If you want **more advanced features but still cheap**, **Podbean** is a strong budget pick.
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If you mean **lowest cost to start hosting a podcast**, **Spotify for Creators** is the cheapest: it offers **free podcast hosting**. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) If you want a **paid host with the lowest entry price**, **RSS.com** is one of the cheapest at **$11.99/month billed annually**. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) Quick take: - **Cheapest overall:** Spotify for Creators (free). ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Cheapest paid option:** RSS.com ($11.99/mo annually). ([rss.com](https://rss.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Another low-cost paid option:** Podbean starts at **$12/mo annually**. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting-pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you the **best cheap host for beginners** vs **best cheap host for monetization**.
Do podcast hosting platforms offer a free trial? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes—many do, but it varies by platform. Examples: - **Buzzsprout**: has a **free plan** (not just a trial) - **Transistor**: typically offers a **free trial** - **Captivate**: usually offers a **free trial** - **Spreaker**: has a **free plan** and paid tiers - **Podbean**: often offers a **free tier** and paid plans - **Simplecast**: commonly offers a **trial** - **RSS.com**: usually offers a **free trial** If you want, I can give you a quick list of the best podcast hosting platforms with their current trial length and pricing.
retrieval Mentioned
Yes—many do, but it varies by platform. - **Buzzsprout** offers a **free plan** you can start on, which functions like a trial for exploring the platform. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/231-what-is-included-in-the-free-plan?utm_source=openai)) - **Transistor** offers a **14-day free trial**. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** says you can start with a **free month of hosting**. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Spotify for Creators** offers **free podcast hosting** rather than a limited trial. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/switch?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can compare the best free trial/free plan options for your podcast size and budget.
What podcast hosting platforms have unlimited storage? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
A few podcast hosting platforms market **unlimited storage** (usually with some fair-use limits): - **Captivate** — unlimited storage and bandwidth on paid plans - **Transistor** — unlimited podcasts, episodes, and storage - **Buzzsprout** — not truly unlimited on lower plans, but higher tiers offer generous upload limits; not best fit if you need unlimited - **Spreaker** — some plans include unlimited storage/bandwidth - **Podbean** — unlimited audio hosting on paid Unlimited plans - **Libsyn** — storage is plan-based, not unlimited on most plans - **RSS.com** — not unlimited storage on every plan, but very large/“unmetered” usage on higher tiers **Best bets for unlimited storage:** 1. **Captivate** 2. **Transistor** 3. **Podbean Unlimited** 4. **Spreaker** If you want, I can also narrow this down by **price**, **best analytics**, or **best for beginners**.
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Current platforms that advertise **unlimited storage** include: - **Captivate** — says it offers “unlimited uploads/storage” and “we’ll never limit the amount of podcasts, episodes or time you can upload, on any plan.” ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/im-worried-about/paying-for-extra-downloads-or-storage?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — advertises “unmetered bandwidth & unlimited storage,” and its paid plans/host pages repeat that. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/mobile?utm_source=openai)) - **Simplecast** — its pricing page says “Unlimited storage & uploads” on plans, and the FAQ confirms unlimited audio storage. ([simplecast.com](https://www.simplecast.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **RSS.com** — its free Local & Niche plan says “Unlimited Episodes” and “Unlimited Storage.” ([rss.com](https://rss.com/podcasts/minuit/?utm_source=openai)) - **Spreaker** — says all plans, including free, allow unlimited episodes; its Prime docs also mention “unlimited storage and unlimited podcasts.” ([spreaker.com](https://www.spreaker.com/our-platform?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best unlimited-storage host for beginners**, **best for teams**, or **cheapest option**.
How much does podcast hosting cost per month? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Podcast hosting usually costs **$0–$25/month** for most creators, though it can go higher for larger shows. Common examples: - **Spotify for Creators (Anchor)**: **Free** - **Buzzsprout**: starts at **$12/month** - **Transistor**: starts at **$19/month** - **Captivate**: starts at **$17/month** - **Podbean**: starts at **$9/month** - **Libsyn**: starts around **$7/month** - **RSS.com**: starts around **$15/month** What affects price: - **Upload limits / storage** - **Number of podcasts** - **Downloads per month** - **Team features** - **Advanced analytics / monetization** If you want, I can recommend the **best cheap hosting** or **best overall hosting** based on your podcast size.
retrieval Mentioned
Podcast hosting is often **free to about $20–$30/month for most solo shows**. Free options exist, like **Spotify for Creators**, which says hosting is free, and **RSS.com** also has a free plan. Paid starter plans include **Buzzsprout at $19/month**, **Libsyn at $12/month**, **Podbean at $17/month**, **Captivate at $17/month paid yearly**, and **Acast at $14.99/month**. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) For bigger shows, pricing can jump to **$40–$100+ per month**, and high-volume plans can reach **$129/month on Podbean Business** or **$150/month on Libsyn Max**. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting-pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can recommend the **best host by budget** (free, cheap, or pro).
Which podcast hosting platforms have the best value? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Best value podcast hosting platforms, in my opinion: 1. **Buzzsprout** - Best overall for ease + value - Clean interface, reliable analytics, good distribution tools - Great if you want something simple and polished 2. **Captivate** - Best value for growing shows - Good feature set for the price: private podcasts, website, CTAs, teams - Better than many entry-level hosts once you’re serious 3. **Transistor** - Best for multiple podcasts or professional use - Strong analytics, nice player, unlimited podcasts on higher plans - Good value if you manage more than one show 4. **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) - Best free option - Free hosting, easy to start, built-in recording tools - Good for testing an idea, but less “pro” than paid hosts 5. **RedCircle** - Best for monetization value - Free/low-cost hosting plus ad and cross-promo features - Worth it if you want revenue tools early 6. **Libsyn** - Best legacy host for reliability - Not the fanciest, but very dependable - Good if you care more about long-term stability than modern extras **My quick picks:** - **Best overall value:** Buzzsprout - **Best free:** Spotify for Creators - **Best for growing teams/serious podcasters:** Captivate - **Best for monetization:** RedCircle If you want, I can also give you the **best value by budget**: under $15/mo, under $25/mo, and free.
retrieval Mentioned
If you want **best value**, I’d shortlist these: - **Spotify for Creators** — best **free** value. It offers free hosting, unlimited hosting/uploads, distribution, analytics, and monetization tools. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/features/podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **Libsyn** — best **low-cost paid** value if you want a classic host. Plans start at **$12/mo** after a 30-day free trial, with more upload capacity as you move up. ([libsyn.com](https://libsyn.com/3/plans-and-pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Transistor** — best value for **multiple shows**. It starts at **$19/mo** and includes **unlimited podcasts** and team members, with plans scaling by monthly downloads. ([transistor.fm](https://transistor.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — best value for **beginners who want simplicity**. It has a free plan, month-to-month billing, and paid plans that scale by uploaded hours. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Captivate** — best value if you want **growth tools included** and multiple shows, with plans starting at **$17/mo billed yearly** and unlimited podcasts/uploads. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — best value for **higher-volume creators**. It has an unlimited-audio/video lineup and a network plan at **$79/mo billed yearly** on the page I found. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting-pricing?utm_source=openai)) **My quick take:** - **Best overall value:** Spotify for Creators - **Best cheap paid option:** Libsyn - **Best for podcast networks / multiple shows:** Transistor - **Best user-friendly option:** Buzzsprout If you tell me your budget and whether you need video, private podcasts, or monetization, I can narrow it to 2–3 best picks.
What podcast hosting platform has the best paid plan? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
**Best overall paid podcast hosting plan: _Captivate_** Why it stands out: - Unlimited shows and team members - Great analytics - Built-in marketing tools - Dynamic content and private podcast options - Strong value for the price **Good runners-up** - **Transistor** — best if you want a polished, easy-to-use host for multiple shows or a company podcast network - **Buzzsprout** — best for beginners who want the simplest setup and great support - **Libsyn** — best for long-running podcasters who care most about distribution and reliability - **Podbean** — best if you want monetization features built in **Quick pick** - **Best overall:** Captivate - **Best beginner-friendly:** Buzzsprout - **Best for business/multi-show:** Transistor If you want, I can rank these by **price, analytics, monetization, or ease of use**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For most creators, **RSS.com’s “All in One Podcasting”** looks like the best paid plan right now: **$11.99/month billed annually**, with **unlimited audio/episodes**, **AI transcripts**, **advanced analytics**, **Apple Podcasts Subscriptions**, **audio-to-video**, **dynamic ads**, and **priority support**. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/pricing/)) If you need a bigger network or more team capacity, **RSS.com Podcast Networks** is the stronger upgrade at **$18.75/month annually** with **unlimited podcasts**, **unlimited team seats**, and **API access**. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/pricing/)) If you want, I can also give you the **best paid plan for solo creators vs. networks vs. monetization**.
Are there podcast hosting platforms with no setup fee? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes — several podcast hosting platforms have **no setup fee**. Popular options: - **Spotify for Creators** (free hosting) - **Buzzsprout** (free plan, no setup fee) - **Podbean** (free plan, no setup fee) - **RedCircle** (free hosting, no setup fee) - **Transistor** (no setup fee, but paid plans) - **Captivate** (no setup fee, paid plans) - **RSS.com** (no setup fee, paid plans) If you want the simplest free start, I’d look at: 1. **Spotify for Creators** 2. **Buzzsprout** 3. **RedCircle** If you want, I can also compare them by **price, analytics, and monetization**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes. Several podcast hosts let you start with **no setup fee**: - **RSS.com** — “Start for Free” and “No credit card required.” ([rss.com](https://rss.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — “Start a Podcast for Free” and “No credit card required.” ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — offers a **free account** you can upgrade later. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting-pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Spotify for Creators** — Spotify describes it as a **free tool** to get started. ([creators.spotify.com](https://creators.spotify.com/resources/spotify-open-access?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a short list of the **best no-setup-fee options** depending on whether you want **cheapest**, **easiest**, or **best for growth**.
What podcast hosting platforms include monetization tools in the price? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Yes—these podcast hosts include monetization tools without charging a separate platform fee for the feature set: - **Spotify for Creators** — ads, listener support, paid subscriptions - **Podbean** — ad marketplace, patron/paid content tools - **RedCircle** — dynamic ads, listener donations, subscriptions - **Acast** — ad monetization and paid content tools - **Libsyn** — ads and premium subscription options - **Spreaker** — monetization tools on paid plans Notes: - You may still pay **processing fees** (Stripe/PayPal) or the host may take a **revenue share**. - Some monetization features depend on **eligibility** and audience size. If you want, I can also rank these by **cheapest**, **best for ads**, or **best for paid memberships**.
retrieval Not mentioned
A few podcast hosts include monetization tools in the hosting price: - **Captivate** — monetization tools are included on **every plan**, including memberships, tips, and ad marketplace features. ([captivate.fm](https://www.captivate.fm/feature-focus/podcast-monetization?utm_source=openai)) - **Podbean** — its paid plans include monetization features like **Apple Podcasts Subscriptions, Ads Marketplace, and PodAds**. ([podbean.com](https://www.podbean.com/podcast-hosting-pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **RSS.com** — includes monetization options such as **dynamic ad insertion, Apple Podcasts Subscriptions, and listener support**. ([rss.com](https://rss.com/features/podcast-monetization/?utm_source=openai)) - **Buzzsprout** — monetization is included on **paid plans**, with tools like **Subscriptions, Listener Support, and Buzzsprout Ads**. ([buzzsprout.com](https://www.buzzsprout.com/help/231-what-is-included-in-the-free-plan?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also make you a **best-for-small-podcast** shortlist or compare which one takes the **lowest cut / fees**.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best podcast hosting platforms for beginners? 720/mo
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
For beginners, the best podcast hosting platforms are usually the ones that are **easy to set up, affordable, and distribute automatically**. ### Best overall for beginners **Buzzsprout** - Very beginner-friendly dashboard - Easy publishing and analytics - Great support and onboarding - Good if you want a simple “just works” experience ### Best free option **Spotify for Podcasters** - Free hosting - Easy to start fast - Good if you mainly want to publish without upfront cost - Best for hobby podcasters and testing the waters ### Best for simple monetization **Podbean** - Easy to use - Built-in monetization options - Good value for beginners who may want to grow into ads or premium content ### Best for clean, professional branding **Transistor** - Very polished and simple - Great for multiple shows - Good analytics and private podcast support - Slightly more advanced, but still beginner-friendly ### Best long-term classic choice **Libsyn** - One of the oldest and most trusted hosts - Solid reliability and distribution - Interface is less modern, but it’s dependable ## My quick recommendation - **Most beginners:** **Buzzsprout** - **Free starter option:** **Spotify for Podcasters** - **If you want monetization early:** **Podbean** If you want, I can also give you the **best option based on your budget** or **a side-by-side comparison table**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
For beginners, the best podcast hosting platforms are usually the ones that are easy to set up, include distribution to major apps, and don’t overwhelm you with tech. ### Best overall for beginners **Buzzsprout** - Super easy to use - Clean dashboard, great analytics - Helps distribute to Spotify, Apple Podcasts, etc. - Good if you want a simple, polished start ### Best free/cheap beginner option **Spotify for Creators** - Free to use - Easy publishing and Spotify integration - Good for first-time podcasters testing the waters - Best if you want minimal upfront cost ### Best if you want simple + all-in-one **Captivate** - Beginner-friendly but more powerful as you grow - Good tools for growth, websites, and monetization - Nice balance of simplicity and features ### Best for WordPress users **Libsyn** - One of the oldest podcast hosts - Reliable and widely trusted - A bit less modern-looking, but solid - Good if you want long-term stability ### Best budget option **Podbean** - Affordable plans - Easy to use - Includes monetization options - Good for creators who want a lot without paying much ### Best for creators who want a website too **Transistor** - Very clean interface - Great for multiple shows - Strong website and RSS features - Slightly more advanced, but still beginner-friendly ## My top picks - **Absolute beginner:** Buzzsprout - **Free starter:** Spotify for Creators - **Best budget:** Podbean - **Best long-term growth:** Captivate If you want, I can also give you a **“best podcast host by budget”** list or help you choose based on your goals.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For beginners, the best podcast hosting platforms are: 1. **Buzzsprout** - Easiest to use, very beginner-friendly - Clean dashboard, great onboarding, good analytics - Good if you want simple setup and support 2. **Podbean** - Affordable and straightforward - Unlimited hosting on many plans - Good all-around choice for new podcasters 3. **Spotify for Podcasters** - Free to start - Easy if you want your show on Spotify quickly - Good for basic publishing, less polished than paid hosts 4. **Captivate** - Great for growth tools and a modern interface - Easy to use, strong marketing features - Good if you want to scale later 5. **Transistor** - Very clean and professional - Great for multiple shows or a branded podcast - Slightly more premium, but still beginner-friendly **Best overall for most beginners:** **Buzzsprout** **Best free option:** **Spotify for Podcasters** **Best budget option:** **Podbean** If you want, I can also give you a **best podcast host based on your budget** or **compare 3 platforms side by side**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
For beginners, the best podcast hosting platforms are usually the ones that are easy to use, affordable, and handle distribution to Spotify/Apple Podcasts for you. ### Best overall for beginners **Buzzsprout** - Very beginner-friendly - Clean dashboard, easy publishing - Good analytics and simple website/player tools - Great if you want the least friction ### Best for all-in-one ease **Captivate** - Easy to use - Good for growing podcasts - Solid monetization and team features - Nice if you want to scale later ### Best budget option **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) - Free hosting - Simple to start - Directly tied to Spotify ecosystem - Good for testing an idea, though less polished than paid options ### Best for WordPress users **Libsyn** - Longtime industry standard - Reliable and widely supported - Good if you want more control and don’t mind a less modern interface ### Best if you want a polished website + podcast host **Podbean** - Easy hosting and website tools - Good beginner setup - Also offers monetization options ### My quick recommendation - **Absolute beginner:** Buzzsprout - **Free starter:** Spotify for Creators - **Want growth tools:** Captivate - **Want an easy website too:** Podbean If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 based on budget** or **based on whether you plan to monetize**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For beginners, the best podcast hosting platforms are usually the ones that are **easy to use, include distribution to Spotify/Apple Podcasts, and don’t require tech skills**. ### Best overall picks 1. **Buzzsprout** - Very beginner-friendly - Clean dashboard, easy RSS setup - Great analytics and support - Good choice if you want the smoothest start 2. **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) - Free and easy to start - Built-in recording/publishing tools - Best if you want the simplest no-cost option - Less flexible than paid hosts 3. **Captivate** - Easy to use, modern interface - Great if you plan to grow a show - Good for solo creators and small teams 4. **Transistor** - Simple, professional, and reliable - Good for multiple shows - A bit pricier, but very polished 5. **Podbean** - Beginner-friendly and affordable - Offers free and paid plans - Good if you want hosting plus monetization options ### Best by use case - **Best free option:** Spotify for Creators - **Best for ease of use:** Buzzsprout - **Best for long-term growth:** Captivate - **Best for teams/multiple podcasts:** Transistor - **Best budget paid option:** Podbean ### My short recommendation If you’re brand new, start with **Buzzsprout** if you can pay a little, or **Spotify for Creators** if you want free. If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 list based on your budget**.
What are the top podcast hosting platforms for creators? 40/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Top podcast hosting platforms for creators: 1. **Buzzsprout** — best overall for ease of use, strong analytics, great for beginners. 2. **Libsyn** — one of the most established hosts; solid for serious podcasters and advanced distribution. 3. **Transistor** — great for multi-show networks, teams, and branded podcasts. 4. **Captivate** — strong marketing tools, private podcasts, and growth features. 5. **Spreaker** — good for live podcasting and monetization options. 6. **Podbean** — budget-friendly, with built-in monetization and livestreaming. 7. **Acast** — strong for monetization and dynamic ad insertion, especially for larger audiences. 8. **Spotify for Creators** — easy setup, free hosting, best if you want tight Spotify integration. If you want the **best simple pick**, go with **Buzzsprout**. If you want **advanced control**, **Libsyn** or **Transistor** are excellent. If you want, I can also rank them by **price, analytics, monetization, or ease of use**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Top podcast hosting platforms for creators: 1. **Buzzsprout** — very beginner-friendly, clean UI, strong analytics, easy distribution 2. **Libsyn** — one of the oldest and most trusted, solid for serious podcasters 3. **Transistor** — great for branded podcasts, multiple shows, simple team collaboration 4. **Captivate** — strong marketing tools, good for growing audiences and monetization 5. **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free, easy to start, best for beginners on a budget 6. **Podbean** — good all-around option with monetization and live-streaming features 7. **Simplecast** — polished analytics and professional workflow, popular with teams 8. **RSS.com** — straightforward pricing, easy setup, good for newer creators **Best overall for most creators:** **Buzzsprout** **Best free option:** **Spotify for Creators** **Best for teams/brands:** **Transistor** or **Simplecast** If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **analytics**, or **monetization features**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top podcast hosting platforms for creators: 1. **Buzzsprout** — Very beginner-friendly, clean interface, strong analytics, easy distribution. 2. **Libsyn** — One of the oldest and most trusted hosts; great for serious podcasters and reliability. 3. **Podbean** — Solid all-in-one option with monetization tools, live streaming, and app support. 4. **Transistor** — Great for brands, teams, and multi-show networks; polished and simple. 5. **Captivate** — Built for growth with marketing tools, private podcasting, and good analytics. 6. **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — Free and easy to start, especially if you want simple publishing. 7. **RSS.com** — Good value, easy setup, and useful for creators who want straightforward hosting. 8. **Acast** — Strong for monetization and dynamic ad insertion, especially for larger audiences. **Best overall for most creators:** Buzzsprout or Captivate **Best free/simple start:** Spotify for Creators **Best for advanced monetization:** Acast or Podbean If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **best for beginners**, or **best for monetization**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top podcast hosting platforms for creators: 1. **Spotify for Podcasters** Best for beginners. Free, easy to use, and directly integrated with Spotify. 2. **Buzzsprout** Great all-around option. Very user-friendly, with solid analytics and a clean dashboard. 3. **Libsyn** One of the oldest and most reliable hosts. Good for serious podcasters who want strong distribution and control. 4. **Captivate** Built for growth. Offers advanced marketing tools, analytics, and multiple podcasts on one account. 5. **Transistor** Best for brands and teams. Clean interface, private podcast support, and easy multi-show management. 6. **Podbean** Good for monetization. Includes ad tools, live streaming, and listener support features. 7. **RSS.com** Simple and affordable. Nice for creators who want easy setup and solid analytics. 8. **Acast** Strong for monetization and ad marketplace access, especially if you want to grow revenue. **Quick picks:** - **Best free starter:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Best beginner-friendly paid:** Buzzsprout - **Best for advanced creators:** Captivate or Transistor - **Best for monetization:** Podbean or Acast If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **analytics**, or **best for beginners**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top podcast hosting platforms for creators: 1. **Spotify for Podcasters** - Best for: Beginners, free hosting, easy distribution - Why: Free, simple setup, built-in analytics, publishes to Spotify and other major apps. 2. **Buzzsprout** - Best for: Easy-to-use, polished experience - Why: Clean dashboard, strong support, great for small to mid-size podcasts. 3. **Transistor** - Best for: Professional creators, multiple shows - Why: Great for teams, private podcasts, detailed analytics, custom branding. 4. **Captivate** - Best for: Growth-focused podcasters - Why: Strong marketing tools, dynamic insertion, good audience growth features. 5. **Libsyn** - Best for: Long-time podcasters, high-volume publishing - Why: One of the oldest hosts, very reliable, solid monetization and distribution tools. 6. **Podbean** - Best for: All-in-one hosting and monetization - Why: Easy hosting, live streaming, ads, memberships, and listener support options. 7. **Simplecast** - Best for: Advanced analytics and teams - Why: Strong reporting, good for brands and larger productions. 8. **RSS.com** - Best for: Affordable hosting with good features - Why: Easy setup, unlimited storage on many plans, good value for new creators. **Quick picks:** - **Best free option:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Best for beginners:** Buzzsprout - **Best for growth tools:** Captivate - **Best for monetization:** Podbean - **Best for teams/professional shows:** Transistor or Simplecast If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **best for YouTube podcasting**, or **best for monetization**.
Which podcast hosting platform is most recommended?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
**Best overall pick:** **Buzzsprout** It’s the most commonly recommended for most podcasters because it’s **easy to use, beginner-friendly, reliable, and has good analytics/distribution**. **Also worth considering:** - **Libsyn** — best for long-running, serious podcasters who want proven reliability - **Captivate** — great for growing shows and marketing tools - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free and simple, good if you want to start fast - **Transistor** — strong for businesses and multiple shows **Quick recommendation:** - **New to podcasting:** Buzzsprout - **Want free:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Need advanced features:** Captivate or Transistor If you want, I can also recommend the **best one for your budget and goals**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
**Most recommended overall: _Buzzsprout_** — it’s the easiest all-around choice for most podcasters, especially beginners. **Why it’s so commonly recommended:** - very simple setup - great analytics - strong distribution tools - easy website/player embedding - solid support **Best alternatives by use case:** - **Captivate** — best for serious growth and marketing features - **Transistor** — best for professional/multi-show podcasts - **Libsyn** — best for long-time podcasters and reliability - **Podbean** — best budget-friendly all-in-one option - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free and easy, but less feature-rich If you want, I can give you a **“best hosting platform for your situation”** pick based on your budget and experience level.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
**Most recommended overall: _Buzzsprout_** It’s the easiest all-around choice for most podcasters: simple dashboard, reliable hosting, good analytics, and easy distribution. **Other top picks by use case:** - **Libsyn** — best for long-term, serious podcasters who want a proven, feature-rich platform - **Captivate** — great for growth-focused creators and teams - **Transistor** — excellent for brands/multi-show hosting - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free and easy, but less robust than paid options **Quick pick:** - **Beginner:** Buzzsprout - **Professional / high-volume:** Libsyn - **Team / marketing-focused:** Transistor or Captivate If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your budget and whether you’re just starting out.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
**Most recommended overall: _Buzzsprout_** — it’s the easiest all-around podcast hosting platform for most creators. **Why it’s recommended:** - Very beginner-friendly - Reliable distribution to Apple/Spotify/etc. - Good analytics - Simple website/feed setup - Great support **Best alternatives:** - **Transistor** — best if you want a more professional setup or multiple shows - **Libsyn** — solid veteran option, especially for long-term hosting - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free, but less robust than paid options **Quick pick:** - **New podcaster:** Buzzsprout - **Business / multiple shows:** Transistor - **Budget-first:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Old-school reliable:** Libsyn If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your budget and podcast goals.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
If you want the **most widely recommended overall**, I’d pick **Buzzsprout**. Why: - very easy to use - reliable hosting - good analytics - great for beginners and small-to-mid podcasts Other strong picks: - **Transistor** — best for multiple shows / teams - **Captivate** — great growth tools and audience features - **Libsyn** — very established, solid for serious podcasters - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free and simple, but less flexible **Best overall for most people:** **Buzzsprout** **Best for creators with multiple podcasts:** **Transistor** **Best budget option:** **Spotify for Podcasters** If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your budget and whether you’re a beginner or advanced podcaster.
What are popular podcast hosting options right now?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Popular podcast hosting options right now include: - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free, easy to start, good if you want simple publishing and Spotify integration. - **Buzzsprout** — very popular for beginners; clean interface, good analytics, and easy distribution. - **Libsyn** — one of the oldest and most established; solid for serious podcasters and agencies. - **Captivate** — strong for growth tools, multiple shows, and private podcasting. - **Transistor** — popular with indie creators and businesses; great for multiple podcasts under one account. - **Podbean** — good all-around option, with monetization and live-streaming features. - **RSS.com** — simple, modern, and good value for unlimited hosting. - **Simplecast** — favored by professionals/teams; strong analytics and branded player. - **Acast** — popular internationally, especially if you want monetization and dynamic ad tools. - **Blubrry** — good WordPress integration and reliable hosting. If you want a quick pick: - **Best for beginners:** Buzzsprout or Spotify for Creators - **Best for teams/businesses:** Transistor or Captivate - **Best for established shows:** Libsyn or Simplecast - **Best budget option:** RSS.com or Spotify for Creators If you want, I can also give you the **best option by budget, audience size, or monetization goal**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Popular podcast hosting options right now include: - **Buzzsprout** — very popular for beginners; simple UI, good analytics, easy distribution. - **Libsyn** — one of the longest-running hosts; solid for established shows and monetization. - **Podbean** — popular for all-in-one hosting + monetization + live streaming. - **Captivate** — favored by indie creators; strong marketing tools and growth features. - **Transistor** — great for multi-show networks and private podcasts. - **Spotify for Creators** — free and easy, especially if you want direct Spotify integration. - **RSS.com** — simple pricing, unlimited hosting on many plans, good for new podcasters. - **Blubrry** — trusted, WordPress-friendly, good stats via PowerPress. - **Castos** — strong if you use WordPress or want private podcasting. - **Acast** — popular for dynamic ad insertion and monetization, especially in some markets. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for beginners**, **best for monetization**, or **best value**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Popular podcast hosting options right now include: - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free, easy to start, solid for beginners - **Buzzsprout** — very popular for simplicity and good analytics - **Libsyn** — long-running, reliable, good for more serious podcasters - **Transistor** — great for multiple shows and cleaner team workflows - **Captivate** — strong growth/marketing features - **Podbean** — budget-friendly, with monetization options - **RSS.com** — simple setup, good value, increasingly popular - **Blubrry** — especially good if you use WordPress - **Acast** — strong for monetization and larger audiences - **Podigee** — popular in Europe, good publishing tools If you want, I can also narrow these down by **best free**, **best for beginners**, or **best for monetization**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Popular podcast hosting options right now include: - **Libsyn** — long-time pro favorite; reliable, strong analytics, good monetization tools. - **Buzzsprout** — very beginner-friendly, clean UI, easy publishing. - **Captivate** — great for growth tools, dynamic content, and team workflows. - **Transistor** — excellent for multiple shows and branded podcast networks. - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free/easy, especially if you want quick setup. - **Podbean** — solid all-around host with live streaming and monetization. - **RSS.com** — simple pricing, good for solo creators and small teams. - **Acast** — popular for ad monetization and larger audiences. - **Simplecast** — polished, professional, good analytics and embeddable players. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Best for beginners:** Buzzsprout - **Best for pros:** Libsyn or Simplecast - **Best for teams/multiple shows:** Transistor - **Best free option:** Spotify for Creators If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **ease of use**, or **best for monetization**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Popular podcast hosting options right now include: - **Buzzsprout** — very beginner-friendly, clean interface, strong analytics - **Libsyn** — one of the oldest, reliable, lots of distribution tools - **Captivate** — strong for growing shows, great marketing/CTA features - **Transistor** — good for teams and multiple shows, polished branding - **Podbean** — solid all-in-one option, includes monetization tools - **RSS.com** — simple pricing, easy setup, good for new podcasters - **Spreaker** — good if you want live podcasting and monetization - **Simplecast** — popular with more established creators and networks - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free and easy, especially for beginners - **CoHost** — more analytics and audience insights, often used by brands If you want, I can also rank these by **best for beginners**, **best for growth**, or **best budget option**.
What is the best podcast hosting platform for independent podcasters?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
For most independent podcasters, **Buzzsprout** is the best overall podcast hosting platform. **Why Buzzsprout stands out:** - Very easy to use - Reliable analytics - Good distribution to Apple, Spotify, etc. - Built-in website and episode pages - Helpful features without feeling overwhelming **Strong alternatives:** - **Transistor** — best if you want multiple shows, a more polished brand, or advanced team features - **Captivate** — great for growth tools and indie creators - **Libsyn** — solid old-school option, but less beginner-friendly - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free and simple, but less robust as a long-term host **My quick recommendation:** - **Best for most people:** Buzzsprout - **Best for growing a media brand:** Transistor - **Best free option:** Spotify for Podcasters If you want, I can also give you the **best host for your budget, audience size, and monetization goals**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
For most **independent podcasters**, the **best overall podcast hosting platform is Buzzsprout**. ### Why Buzzsprout - Very easy to use - Reliable hosting and distribution - Good analytics - Built-in podcast website - Great support - Good for solo creators and small shows ### Best alternatives by need - **Transistor** — best if you want a more professional, multi-show setup - **Captivate** — best for growth-focused podcasters and marketing tools - **Spotify for Podcasters** — best free option, but fewer advanced features - **Libsyn** — best for long-running, traditional podcast hosting ### My quick pick - **Best overall:** **Buzzsprout** - **Best for serious growth:** **Captivate** - **Best for advanced control:** **Transistor** If you want, I can also give you the **best platform based on your budget** or **compare Buzzsprout vs Captivate vs Transistor**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
**Best overall for independent podcasters: _Buzzsprout_** Why it’s the best fit: - Very easy to use - Great analytics - Reliable RSS/distribution - Good for beginners and solo creators - Clean website and episode pages **If you want the best alternatives:** - **Captivate** — best for growth and monetization tools - **Transistor** — best for multiple shows and simple team workflows - **Libsyn** — best for long-time podcasters who want a very established host - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free, but more limited and less flexible **My quick pick:** - **New independent podcaster:** Buzzsprout - **Want advanced growth tools:** Captivate - **Want the simplest team/multi-show setup:** Transistor If you want, I can also give you the **best podcast host by budget**, **best for video podcasts**, or **best for monetization**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
**Best overall: Buzzsprout** For most independent podcasters, **Buzzsprout** is the best mix of ease, pricing, and features. It’s beginner-friendly, has solid analytics, easy distribution to Spotify/Apple Podcasts, and a clean dashboard. **Why it stands out:** - Very easy to use - Good built-in analytics - Reliable podcast hosting and RSS management - Useful extras like a free podcast website and player embeds **Good alternatives by use case:** - **Transistor** — best if you want multiple shows or a more polished, professional setup - **Libsyn** — best for long-time podcasters who want a very established platform - **Captivate** — strong for growth tools and creator-focused features - **Spotify for Creators** — best if you want free hosting, though it’s less robust than paid options If you want, I can also give you a **best for beginners / best for growth / best budget** comparison.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
**Best overall for independent podcasters: _Buzzsprout_** Why it stands out: - Very easy to use - Solid analytics - Good distribution to Apple Podcasts, Spotify, etc. - Built-in podcast website - Good for solo creators and small shows **Strong alternatives:** - **Transistor** — best if you want a more polished, pro setup for multiple shows or a branded network - **Captivate** — great for growth tools and marketing features - **Libsyn** — very reliable, long-running, good for advanced users - **Podbean** — good all-in-one option, especially if you want monetization tools If you want the simplest answer: **Buzzsprout is the best pick for most independent podcasters.**
Which podcast hosting platforms are worth using?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
A few podcast hosting platforms are genuinely worth using, depending on your needs: - **Spotify for Podcasters** — Best free starter option. Easy publishing, solid analytics, and direct Spotify distribution. - **Buzzsprout** — Best all-around for most creators. Very easy to use, good support, and polished tools. - **Transistor** — Great for teams, networks, and multiple shows. Clean interface, private podcasting, and strong analytics. - **Captivate** — Good for growth-focused creators. Nice marketing tools, customizable player, and good pricing tiers. - **Libsyn** — Longtime industry standard. Reliable, feature-rich, and good if you want broad distribution control. - **Riverside FM** — Best if you also want to record interviews remotely and host in one place. - **Podbean** — Solid budget-friendly choice with monetization options and live streaming features. - **Simplecast** — Strong analytics and professional-grade tooling, especially for established shows. My quick picks: - **Just starting out:** Spotify for Podcasters or Buzzsprout - **Best overall paid:** Buzzsprout or Transistor - **Best for advanced teams:** Transistor or Libsyn - **Best for recording + hosting:** Riverside FM If you want, I can also give you the best option for **solo creators, business podcasts, or monetization**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
The best podcast hosting platforms worth using are: - **Buzzsprout** — best all-around for beginners; very easy to use, solid analytics, good distribution. - **Transistor** — best for multiple shows; clean interface, strong analytics, great for teams. - **Captivate** — great for growth features; good website, email capture, promo tools. - **Libsyn** — one of the oldest and most reliable; good if you want a proven, no-frills host. - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free and simple, but better as a starter than a long-term “pro” solution. - **Podbean** — strong value, especially if you want monetization and live-streaming options. - **Riverside** — best if you want recording + hosting in one place, especially for video podcasts. - **CoHost** — good analytics and marketing tools, especially for brands and teams. ### Quick picks - **Best for most people:** Buzzsprout - **Best for teams/brands:** Transistor - **Best budget/free option:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Best for monetization:** Podbean - **Best for video-first podcasts:** Riverside ### What to avoid - Very cheap hosts with weak support - “Unlimited” plans with poor analytics or slow uploads - Hosts that make switching out hard If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best platform for your budget**, or 2. a **side-by-side comparison table**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
A few podcast hosting platforms are genuinely worth using: - **Buzzsprout** — Best all-around for ease of use. Clean interface, solid analytics, good for beginners. - **Libsyn** — Best for long-running, serious shows. Very established, reliable, strong distribution options. - **Captivate** — Great for growth-focused podcasters. Good marketing tools, private podcasting, and nicer modern UX. - **Transistor** — Best for teams and multi-show networks. Simple, professional, and easy to manage multiple podcasts. - **Podbean** — Good value and lots of built-in features, including monetization options. - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — Free and easy, but less flexible and polished than paid hosts. - **RSS.com** — Strong budget-friendly option with unlimited hosting and easy setup. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Beginner:** Buzzsprout - **Best pro choice:** Libsyn - **Best modern growth tool:** Captivate - **Best for teams:** Transistor - **Best free option:** Spotify for Creators If you want, I can also rank them by **price, analytics, monetization, or ease of use**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
A few podcast hosting platforms are actually worth using: - **Buzzsprout** — best all-around for ease of use, clean dashboard, good analytics. - **Transistor** — great if you want multiple shows, simple pricing, and private podcasts. - **Captivate** — solid for growth tools and marketing features. - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free and easy, but less flexible/professional than paid hosts. - **Libsyn** — very established, good for serious podcasters who want reliability and control. - **Podbean** — good value, includes monetization and live streaming options. - **Simplecast** — strong analytics and polished workflow, better for teams and brands. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Best for beginners:** Buzzsprout - **Best for creators with multiple shows:** Transistor - **Best free option:** Spotify for Creators - **Best for advanced/enterprise use:** Libsyn or Simplecast If you tell me your budget and whether you’re solo, brand, or network, I can narrow it to 1–2 best picks.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
A few podcast hosts are consistently worth using: - **Buzzsprout** — best all-around for beginners and small shows; very easy to use, solid analytics. - **Transistor** — great for teams, networks, and business podcasts; clean interface, multiple shows, good private podcasting. - **Captivate** — strong for growth features like calls-to-action, email capture, and monetization tools. - **Libsyn** — one of the most established hosts; reliable, widely used, good if you want a proven classic. - **Podbean** — good value, especially if you want built-in monetization and a straightforward setup. - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free and simple, best if you’re just starting and want minimal cost. - **Acast** — worth considering if you care about audience growth and ad monetization. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Beginner:** Buzzsprout or Spotify for Creators - **Serious indie show:** Transistor or Captivate - **Old-school reliable:** Libsyn If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **analytics**, or **best for monetization**.
What are the best podcast hosting services for new shows? 260/mo
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
For **new podcasts**, the best hosting services are usually the ones that are **easy to use, affordable, and include solid distribution tools**. ### Best overall for new shows 1. **Buzzsprout** - Very beginner-friendly - Clean dashboard, good analytics - Easy distribution to Spotify/Apple Podcasts - Great if you want the simplest setup 2. **Transistor** - Excellent for multiple shows or brands - Strong analytics and private podcast options - More polished than many competitors - Best if you want room to grow 3. **Captivate** - Built for growth and marketing - Good tools for calls-to-action, email capture, and monetization - Nice for creators who care about audience building ### Best free/low-cost options 4. **Spotify for Creators** - Free hosting - Easy to start quickly - Best if you’re launching with almost no budget - Less powerful than paid hosts for long-term growth 5. **RSS.com** - Simple, affordable, and beginner-friendly - Good unlimited hosting plans - Strong choice for first-time podcasters ### Best for WordPress users 6. **Libsyn** - One of the oldest and most reliable hosts - Very stable, widely used - Best if you want a proven, no-frills platform 7. **Blubrry** - Good WordPress integration via PowerPress - Solid analytics - Best if your podcast lives on a WordPress site ### My quick recommendations - **Easiest to start:** Buzzsprout - **Best free option:** Spotify for Creators - **Best for growth:** Captivate or Transistor - **Best if you use WordPress:** Blubrry or Libsyn If you want, I can also give you the **best podcast host by budget** or **pick one based on your exact goals**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For new podcasts, the best hosting services are usually the ones that are **easy to use, affordable, and have good distribution tools**. ### Best picks - **Buzzsprout** — Best overall for beginners Simple interface, great analytics, easy setup, and solid customer support. - **Spotify for Podcasters** — Best free option Free hosting, very easy to start with, and built-in publishing to Spotify. - **Transistor** — Best for teams or multiple shows Clean dashboard, unlimited shows on most plans, and good private podcast support. - **Captivate** — Best for growth tools Strong marketing features, great embeddable player, and good audience tools. - **Podbean** — Best budget-friendly paid option Affordable, reliable, and includes monetization options. ### Quick recommendation - **Absolute beginner:** Buzzsprout - **No budget:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Planning to grow fast:** Captivate - **Multiple shows or a team:** Transistor If you want, I can also give you a **best hosting service by budget** or **compare Buzzsprout vs Spotify for Podcasters vs Podbean**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
For new shows, the best podcast hosting services are usually the ones that are **easy to use, affordable, and reliable**. ### Best picks - **Spotify for Podcasters** — **best free option for beginners** - Free hosting, easy setup, good if you’re just starting. - **Buzzsprout** — **best overall for new podcasters** - Very beginner-friendly, great dashboard, good stats, easy distribution. - **Transistor** — **best for multiple shows / growing brands** - Clean interface, solid analytics, good if you expect to scale. - **Captivate** — **best for audience growth tools** - Good marketing features, email capture, customizable podcast pages. - **Libsyn** — **best for long-term reliability** - One of the oldest hosts, very stable, good for serious podcasters. - **RSS.com** — **best value** - Strong features for the price, simple onboarding, good analytics. - **Podbean** — **best for monetization** - Good if you want ads, memberships, or paid subscriptions later. ### Quick recommendation - **Absolute beginner:** Spotify for Podcasters or Buzzsprout - **Best paid starter choice:** Buzzsprout - **Best value:** RSS.com - **Best for growth:** Captivate or Transistor If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 based on your budget**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
For new podcasts, the best hosting services are usually the ones that are **easy to use, reliable, and affordable**. My top picks: 1. **Buzzsprout** Best overall for beginners. Very simple interface, great analytics, and easy distribution to Apple Podcasts/Spotify. Free plan is limited, paid plans are straightforward. 2. **Transistor** Best if you want multiple shows or a more polished, professional setup. Clean dashboard, good analytics, and supports team use well. 3. **Captivate** Great for growth features like email capture, private podcasts, and solid marketing tools. Good choice if you want to scale. 4. **Podbean** Strong all-in-one option, especially if you may want monetization later. Also has a free plan, but the paid plans are more useful. 5. **Libsyn** One of the oldest and most trusted hosts. Excellent reliability and industry credibility, but the interface feels a bit more dated than Buzzsprout or Transistor. 6. **RSS.com** Very beginner-friendly, simple pricing, and good for launching quickly. A solid newer option. ### Best picks by need - **Easiest for beginners:** Buzzsprout - **Best for multiple shows:** Transistor - **Best for growth tools:** Captivate - **Best budget/free starter:** Podbean or RSS.com - **Best legacy/pro reliability:** Libsyn If you want, I can also give you the **best podcast host for your budget** or **compare Buzzsprout vs Podbean vs Transistor**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For new podcasts, the best hosting services are usually: 1. **Buzzsprout** — **best overall for beginners** - Very easy to use, great analytics, good distribution tools - Free plan available, paid plans are simple - Best if you want the least technical setup 2. **RSS.com** — **best value for new shows** - Strong feature set for the price - Good for unlimited episodes and simple publishing - Great if you want affordable hosting without much fuss 3. **Captivate** — **best for growth/marketing** - Solid website, built-in promotion tools, listener-focused features - Good if you want to build an audience fast 4. **Transistor** — **best for multiple shows or teams** - Clean interface, great private podcasts and multi-show management - Better if you plan to expand beyond one show 5. **Spotify for Podcasters** — **best free option** - Free hosting, easy to start - Good for testing an idea, but less polished than paid services 6. **Podbean** — **best for monetization options** - Good if you want ads, memberships, or live streaming later - Feature-rich, but the interface is a bit less modern ### My quick recommendation - **Just starting out:** **Buzzsprout** - **Best cheap option:** **RSS.com** - **Free trial/zero budget:** **Spotify for Podcasters** - **Planning to grow seriously:** **Captivate** or **Transistor** If you want, I can also give you the **best podcast hosts by budget** or **a side-by-side comparison table**.
What podcast hosting platform should I use?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the safest default pick: **Buzzsprout**. ### Best overall - **Buzzsprout** — easiest to use, great analytics, good beginner UX, reliable distribution. ### Best for serious growth / multiple podcasts - **Transistor** — excellent for teams, private podcasts, and professional hosting. ### Best free/cheap start - **Spotify for Creators** — free, simple, good if you’re just launching. ### Best for monetization / built-in tools - **Captivate** — strong marketing and monetization features. ### Best for video + podcast workflows - **Riverside** — best if you record remote interviews and want hosting too. ### My quick recommendation - **New podcaster:** Buzzsprout - **Business/agency:** Transistor - **Budget-conscious:** Spotify for Creators If you want, I can recommend **the best one for your budget, audience size, and whether you do solo or interview podcasts**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
If you want the simplest “just works” option, use **Buzzsprout**. **Best picks by use case:** - **Buzzsprout** — best overall for most beginners; easy setup, clean analytics, good support - **Captivate** — best if you want growth tools and multiple shows - **Libsyn** — best for long-running/pro users who want solid, reliable hosting - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free and fine for starting out, but less flexible than paid hosts - **Transistor** — great for brands, teams, and multi-show setups **My recommendation:** - **New podcast / solo creator:** **Buzzsprout** - **Business or network:** **Transistor** or **Captivate** - **Need free:** **Spotify for Podcasters** If you tell me your budget and whether this is a hobby or business show, I’ll pick the best one for you.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
For most people, I’d start with **Buzzsprout**. **Best overall:** - **Buzzsprout** — easiest to use, great analytics, solid distribution, good support. **Best for WordPress users:** - **Libsyn** — very established, reliable, good if you want a classic podcast host. - **Seriously Simple Podcasting + Castos** — strong if you want everything tied into WordPress. **Best for creators who want growth tools:** - **Captivate** — strong analytics, website tools, and audience features. - **Transistor** — clean, modern, good for multiple shows and teams. **Best free/cheap starter option:** - **Spotify for Creators** — free and simple, but less flexible long-term. **My quick recommendation:** - **New podcaster:** Buzzsprout - **Business/team podcast:** Captivate or Transistor - **WordPress-based site:** Castos - **Budget-first:** Spotify for Creators If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your **budget, audience size, and whether you use WordPress**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
If you want the safest default: **Buzzsprout**. ### Best overall - **Buzzsprout** — easiest to use, polished analytics, solid support, good for beginners and serious hobbyists. ### Best for growth/marketing - **Transistor** — great if you want multiple shows, private podcasts, and clean team workflows. - **Captivate** — strong built-in growth tools and a modern dashboard. ### Best for WordPress users - **Libsyn** — very established, reliable, flexible, especially if you want total control. - **Blubrry** — good WordPress integration with PowerPress. ### Best if you want “all-in-one” with video + podcasting - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free and simple, but less professional if you care about advanced control. ### My quick recommendation - **New podcaster:** Buzzsprout - **Business/brand podcast:** Transistor - **Budget/free:** Spotify for Creators - **WordPress-heavy setup:** Libsyn or Blubrry If you tell me your budget, whether you use WordPress, and how many episodes you expect per month, I can give you a single best pick.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
If you want the safest default: **Buzzsprout**. **Best overall:** - **Buzzsprout** — easiest to use, great analytics, good support, solid for beginners and growing shows. **Also great:** - **Captivate** — best if you want growth tools, private podcasting, and a more creator-focused platform. - **Transistor** — excellent for multi-show users, teams, and polished branding. - **Spotify for Podcasters** — free and simple, but less powerful if you want advanced control. - **Libsyn** — very reliable, long-time industry standard, good for serious podcasters. - **Podbean** — good all-around option, especially if you want monetization features. **My quick recommendation:** - **New podcaster:** Buzzsprout - **Want advanced growth tools:** Captivate - **Running multiple shows / team:** Transistor - **Budget-first:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Most established / traditional:** Libsyn If you tell me your **budget**, **experience level**, and whether you need **video, monetization, or private podcasts**, I can pick the best one for you.
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for small podcasts?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
For a small podcast, the best hosts are usually the ones that are **easy to use, affordable, and good enough to grow with you**. ### Best podcast hosting platforms for small podcasts **1. Buzzsprout** Best overall for most small podcasts. - Very easy setup - Clean dashboard - Good analytics - Free starter plan available **2. Captivate** Best if you want to grow your audience. - Strong marketing tools - Unlimited podcasts on most plans - Good for solo creators and small networks **3. Transistor** Best for multiple shows or a polished workflow. - Simple, professional interface - Great for teams - Good private podcast options **4. Podbean** Best budget-friendly option. - Low-cost plans - Unlimited hosting on many tiers - Good if you want podcast monetization later **5. Libsyn** Best for long-term reliability. - One of the oldest hosts - Solid distribution tools - Good if you want a classic, dependable platform **6. Spotify for Creators** Best if you want free hosting and simplicity. - Free - Easy to publish - Best for beginners, though less flexible than paid options ### My quick picks - **Best overall:** Buzzsprout - **Best budget:** Podbean - **Best for growth:** Captivate - **Best simple free option:** Spotify for Creators If you want, I can also give you a **best podcast host by budget** or a **side-by-side comparison table**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
For a small podcast, the best hosting platforms are usually: 1. **Buzzsprout** — easiest to use, great analytics, clean interface - Best for beginners - Strong episode management and distribution - Good if you want simple setup and support 2. **Captivate** — great for growth and marketing tools - Built for small-to-mid podcasts - Solid website + CTA tools + private podcasting - Good if you want to monetize or grow an audience 3. **Transistor** — best for multiple shows or a polished brand - Simple, professional, reliable - Great for teams and networks - Strong private podcasting features 4. **Podbean** — good all-in-one value - Free and paid plans - Built-in monetization options - Good if you want affordability and flexibility 5. **Libsyn** — classic, reliable, very established - Strong distribution and long-term stability - Good if you care more about reliability than bells and whistles 6. **Spotify for Podcasters** (free) — best if you want zero cost to start - Free hosting - Easy to launch - Best for testing an idea, though less robust than paid hosts ### My quick picks - **Best overall for small podcasts:** **Buzzsprout** - **Best free option:** **Spotify for Podcasters** - **Best for growth tools:** **Captivate** - **Best budget-friendly paid option:** **Podbean** If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 based on your budget**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
For small podcasts, the best hosting platforms are usually the ones that are easy to use, affordable, and give you good distribution to Apple/Spotify. ### Best overall - **Buzzsprout** — very beginner-friendly, polished analytics, easy setup. - **Transistor** — great if you want multiple shows or a professional, clean interface. - **Captivate** — strong for growth tools and a simple pricing model. ### Best budget options - **Spotify for Podcasters** (formerly Anchor) — free and simple, good for getting started. - **Podbean** — solid low-cost plans and unlimited hosting on some tiers. ### Best for WordPress users - **Blubrry** — especially good if your site runs on WordPress. - **Seriously Simple Podcasting** — plugin-based, good if you want full control. ### Best if you care about monetization - **Libsyn** — one of the oldest and most trusted, strong distribution and monetization tools. - **Podbean** — good for ads and premium content. ### My quick picks - **New small podcast:** Buzzsprout - **Free starter:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Best pro feel:** Transistor - **Best WordPress integration:** Blubrry If you want, I can also give you the **best platform based on your budget, listener count, and whether you use WordPress**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For small podcasts, the best hosting platforms are usually the ones that are **easy, affordable, and include good analytics/distribution**. ### Best picks - **Buzzsprout** — Best overall for beginners Simple UI, great onboarding, strong distribution, easy stats. - **Transistor** — Best if you want multiple shows or a polished brand Clean interface, unlimited podcasts on many plans, solid private podcasting. - **Captivate** — Best growth-focused option Good marketing tools, SEO features, and podcast website options. - **Spotify for Podcasters** — Best free option Free hosting, easy to start, but fewer advanced features than paid hosts. - **Podbean** — Best budget-friendly all-rounder Low-cost plans, monetization options, and live streaming features. - **RSS.com** — Best for simplicity and unlimited episodes Straightforward setup, good for small teams, nice analytics. ### My quick recommendation - **Most beginners:** Buzzsprout - **Best free starter:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Best value:** Podbean - **Best for a professional look:** Transistor If you want, I can also give you a **“best hosting platform by budget”** or **“best for Apple/Spotify distribution”** list.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
For a small podcast, the best hosting platforms are usually the ones that are **easy to use, affordable, and include good analytics + RSS distribution**. ### Best overall **Buzzsprout** - Very beginner-friendly - Great interface and analytics - Easy distribution to Spotify, Apple Podcasts, etc. - Good if you want “set it and forget it” ### Best budget option **Spotify for Podcasters** - Free to use - Simple to start - Good for very small shows or testing an idea - Best if you want the lowest cost ### Best for growth and monetization **Transistor** - Great for multiple shows, teams, or branded podcasts - Strong analytics and clean workflow - Good if you expect to scale ### Best for WordPress users **Libsyn** - One of the oldest, most reliable hosts - Solid publishing tools - Good for people who care more about control than flashy UI ### Best all-in-one creator platform **Captivate** - Built for growth - Good analytics, website, and private podcast features - Nice middle ground between simple and advanced ### Best for businesses **RSS.com** - Easy to use - Strong support - Good pricing for business podcasts and straightforward publishing ## My quick picks - **Just starting out:** Buzzsprout - **No budget:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Planning to grow fast:** Transistor or Captivate - **Want a trusted veteran:** Libsyn If you want, I can also give you the **best option based on your budget** ($0, under $15/mo, under $20/mo).
What are the top-rated podcast hosting services?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top-rated podcast hosting services: - **Buzzsprout** — Best for beginners; very easy to use, great analytics, and polished distribution tools. - **Libsyn** — One of the oldest and most trusted hosts; solid for serious podcasters and monetization. - **Captivate** — Great for growing shows; strong marketing features and good private podcasting tools. - **Transistor** — Excellent for teams and multi-show networks; clean interface and strong analytics. - **Podbean** — Good all-in-one option; includes hosting, monetization, and live-streaming features. - **Spotify for Podcasters** — Free and simple; best if you want an easy start and Spotify integration. - **Simplecast** — Strong analytics and professional tools; popular with established creators. - **RSS.com** — Good value, simple pricing, and unlimited hosting on many plans. - **Blubrry** — Reliable and PowerPress-friendly for WordPress users. - **RedCircle** — Best if you want monetization and cross-promotion features. **Best overall picks:** - **Best for beginners:** Buzzsprout - **Best free option:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Best for professionals:** Libsyn or Simplecast - **Best for teams:** Transistor If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **analytics**, or **best for WordPress**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top-rated podcast hosting services: - **Buzzsprout** — very beginner-friendly, polished analytics, strong ease of use - **Libsyn** — long-standing, reliable, great for serious podcasters and advanced publishing control - **Transistor** — excellent for teams, multiple shows, clean branding, good analytics - **Captivate** — strong marketing tools, private podcasting, solid for growth-focused creators - **Podbean** — good all-around option with monetization features and live streaming - **RSS.com** — simple setup, unlimited audio, good value for new podcasters - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free and easy to start, though less flexible than paid hosts - **Acast** — strong monetization and ad network options, more popular with larger shows If you want, I can also rank them by **best for beginners**, **best for monetization**, or **best overall value**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top-rated podcast hosting services: - **Spotify for Podcasters** — Free, easy to use, great for beginners, solid distribution to Spotify and major platforms. - **Buzzsprout** — Very popular for simplicity, excellent analytics, clean interface, good for small to mid-sized shows. - **Transistor** — Great for multiple podcasts, private podcasting, and teams; strong branding and analytics. - **Captivate** — Good growth tools, dynamic content, and marketing features; strong all-around option. - **Libsyn** — One of the longest-running hosts; reliable, powerful distribution, good for serious podcasters. - **Podbean** — Affordable, easy to start, includes monetization options and live streaming. - **RSS.com** — Simple pricing, unlimited episodes, and good for podcasts of all sizes. - **Omny Studio** — Best for larger publishers and networks; advanced analytics and enterprise features. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best free option:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Best for beginners:** Buzzsprout - **Best for teams/multiple shows:** Transistor - **Best for growth tools:** Captivate - **Best for enterprise:** Omny Studio If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **ease of use**, or **best for monetization**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the top-rated podcast hosting services are: - **Buzzsprout** — very beginner-friendly, clean interface, great analytics, easy distribution. - **Transistor** — excellent for multiple shows, strong analytics, polished branding. - **Captivate** — good growth tools, unlimited podcasts/episodes on many plans, solid for serious creators. - **Libsyn** — one of the oldest hosts, very reliable, strong publishing/distribution features. - **RSS.com** — simple pricing, good for new podcasters, easy setup. - **Podbean** — affordable, includes monetization options and live streaming. - **Simplecast** — strong analytics and professional tools, popular with teams and networks. - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free and easy to use, best for hobbyists/startups. **Best picks by need:** - **Easiest to use:** Buzzsprout - **Best for growing brands/teams:** Transistor or Captivate - **Best budget/free option:** Spotify for Creators - **Most established:** Libsyn If you want, I can also give you the **best podcast host for beginners, monetization, or large shows**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top-rated podcast hosting services: 1. **Buzzsprout** — Very beginner-friendly, great analytics, easy setup, strong support. 2. **Transistor** — Excellent for teams, multiple shows, clean interface, unlimited podcasts. 3. **Captivate** — Strong growth tools, good for marketers and solo creators alike. 4. **Libsyn** — One of the oldest and most trusted options, solid monetization and distribution. 5. **Podbean** — Good all-in-one choice with monetization, live streaming, and affordable plans. 6. **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — Free and easy to use, best for simple starters. 7. **RSS.com** — Fast setup, good pricing, useful AI features, good for smaller shows. 8. **Simplecast** — Great analytics and professional features, popular with serious podcasters. **Best overall for most people:** **Buzzsprout** or **Transistor** **Best free option:** **Spotify for Creators** **Best for advanced podcasters:** **Libsyn** or **Simplecast** If you want, I can also rank them by **price, ease of use, or monetization**.
Which podcast hosting platforms have the best features?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the podcast hosting platforms with the best feature sets right now: - **Buzzsprout** — Best for ease of use Great analytics, easy distribution, simple website/player, and good support. Very beginner-friendly. - **Libsyn** — Best for advanced control One of the oldest hosts, with strong publishing tools, monetization options, and solid episode scheduling. - **Captivate** — Best for growth features Excellent for private podcasts, email capture, dynamic show notes, and team collaboration. - **Transistor** — Best for multiple shows Clean interface, unlimited podcasts on many plans, private podcasting, and good analytics. Great for networks/brands. - **Podbean** — Best for monetization Strong ad marketplace, live streaming, premium content, and listener subscriptions. - **Spreaker** — Best for live podcasting Good if you want live broadcasts, real-time interaction, and monetization tools. - **Acast** — Best for dynamic ad insertion Better for creators who want robust ad tech and audience monetization at scale. - **RSS.com** — Best value Simple, affordable, and includes useful features like podcast website, analytics, and automatic distribution. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall for most people:** Buzzsprout - **Best for professionals/advanced users:** Libsyn - **Best for monetization:** Podbean or Acast - **Best for teams/multiple shows:** Transistor - **Best for growth marketing:** Captivate If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **analytics**, **monetization**, or **best for beginners**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
The “best” podcast hosting platform depends on what features you care about, but these are the standouts: - **Captivate** — Best overall feature set for most creators Great analytics, private podcasting, dynamic ad insertion, team tools, and clean UX. - **Transistor** — Best for multiple shows and simple scaling Strong private podcasting, unlimited team members, polished dashboard, easy episode distribution. - **Buzzsprout** — Best for beginners Very easy to use, good analytics, excellent onboarding, helpful website/player tools. - **Libsyn** — Best for advanced podcast control Very mature platform, solid monetization options, detailed publishing controls, reliable syndication. - **Acast** — Best for monetization Strong ad network, sponsorship tools, and audience monetization features. - **Podbean** — Best budget-friendly all-in-one option Good value, live streaming, monetization, and decent analytics. - **Spreaker** — Best for live podcasting Strong live audio features, recording tools, and monetization support. If you want the best feature balance: **Captivate**. If you want easiest setup: **Buzzsprout**. If you want monetization: **Acast** or **Libsyn**. If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 based on your use case** (beginners, business podcasts, private podcasts, or monetization).
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the **best podcast hosting platforms by features**: - **Buzzsprout** — best overall for ease of use - Clean dashboard, simple publishing - Excellent analytics - Free podcast website, transcripts add-on, great distribution - **Captivate** — best for growth and marketing tools - Advanced CTAs, audience analytics, embeddable players - Unlimited team members - Great for creators who want to convert listeners - **Libsyn** — best for long-term reliability and control - Very mature platform - Strong monetization/distribution options - Good if you want a proven, no-frills host - **Transistor** — best for multiple shows - Multiple podcasts on one account - Private podcasts, detailed analytics - Great for networks, businesses, and agencies - **RSS.com** — best value for solo podcasters - Easy setup, solid analytics - Free website and episode transcripts - Good pricing for unlimited hosting - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — best free option - Free hosting, recording, and distribution - Easy to start fast - Fewer advanced features than paid hosts - **Podbean** — best for monetization - Ads, premium content, live streaming - Built-in monetization tools - Good if revenue features matter most **If you want the short answer:** - Best overall: **Buzzsprout** - Best for growth: **Captivate** - Best for multiple shows: **Transistor** - Best monetization: **Podbean** If you want, I can also give you a **best platform by budget**, **beginner friendliness**, or **advanced analytics**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the podcast hosting platforms with the best feature sets, depending on what you need: - **Spotify for Creators (formerly Anchor)** — Best free starter option Easy publishing, basic analytics, monetization tools, and direct Spotify integration. - **Buzzsprout** — Best all-around for ease of use Very clean interface, strong analytics, episode scheduling, transcription add-ons, and good distribution. - **Captivate** — Best for growth features Great marketing tools, multiple podcasts on one plan, private podcasting, embeddable player, and advanced analytics. - **Transistor** — Best for teams and multiple shows Excellent for networks, private podcasting, unlimited team members on higher plans, and polished analytics. - **Libsyn** — Best for advanced control and monetization One of the oldest platforms, strong distribution, customizable plans, and solid monetization options. - **Podbean** — Best for built-in monetization Good ad marketplace, live streaming, premium subscriptions, and a broad feature set. - **Riverside.fm** — Best if you also record video/podcast interviews High-quality remote recording, video podcast tools, and easy repurposing for YouTube/social. ### Quick picks - **Best free:** Spotify for Creators - **Best overall ease:** Buzzsprout - **Best for growth tools:** Captivate - **Best for networks/teams:** Transistor - **Best for monetization:** Podbean or Libsyn If you want, I can also rank them by **pricing**, **analytics**, or **best for beginners**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the podcast hosting platforms with the best feature sets right now: - **Buzzsprout** — best overall for ease of use Great RSS management, simple publishing, good stats, automatic episode transcription, and strong distribution tools. - **Libsyn** — best for serious podcasters Very reliable, strong monetization options, advanced publishing controls, dynamic ad insertion, and solid private podcasting. - **Captivate** — best feature balance for growth Excellent analytics, smart podcast websites, CTA tools, team features, and listener funnels. - **Transistor** — best for multiple shows / teams Clean interface, unlimited shows on many plans, private podcasts, good analytics, and nice embedded players. - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — best free option Free hosting, easy recording/editing tools, and direct Spotify distribution. Less powerful than paid platforms. - **Podbean** — best for monetization Good premium content tools, ads, live streaming, and listener support features. - **RSS.com** — best simple all-around value Easy setup, unlimited episode storage on many plans, solid analytics, and good private podcast support. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Best overall:** Buzzsprout - **Best advanced features:** Libsyn - **Best for teams:** Transistor - **Best for monetization:** Podbean If you tell me your budget and whether you care most about analytics, monetization, or simplicity, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 for you.
What are the most reliable podcast hosting platforms?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
The most reliable podcast hosting platforms are usually the ones with strong uptime, fast RSS delivery, solid support, and a long track record. Top picks: 1. **Libsyn** - One of the oldest and most trusted hosts - Very stable, good for serious podcasters - Strong distribution tools and podcast app integrations 2. **Buzzsprout** - Very reliable and beginner-friendly - Clean interface, excellent support, easy publishing - Great for small to mid-size shows 3. **Captivate** - Built for growth and reliability - Good analytics, clean workflow, solid support - Popular with independent creators 4. **Transistor** - Great uptime and professional features - Good for multiple shows and teams - Strong reputation for stability 5. **Spotify for Podcasters** (formerly Anchor) - Free and easy to use - Reliable enough for many creators - Best for simple setups, though less flexible than paid hosts 6. **Podbean** - Long-running, dependable platform - Good monetization options - Strong all-in-one feature set **Best overall for reliability:** **Libsyn** or **Transistor** **Best for beginners:** **Buzzsprout** **Best free option:** **Spotify for Podcasters** If you want, I can also rank these by **best for beginners, best for large shows, or best value**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most reliable podcast hosting platforms are: 1. **Buzzsprout** - Very stable, easy to use, excellent support, good uptime. 2. **Libsyn** - One of the oldest and most established hosts; very dependable for long-term hosting. 3. **Transistor** - Strong reliability, clean interface, great for teams and multiple shows. 4. **Captivate** - Good performance, solid analytics, and a good reputation for support. 5. **RSS.com** - Simple, reliable, and fast to set up; good for straightforward podcast hosting. 6. **Simplecast** - Professional-grade hosting with strong infrastructure and analytics. **Best overall for reliability:** - **Libsyn** if you want the most battle-tested option - **Buzzsprout** if you want the easiest reliable option - **Transistor** if you want reliability plus a modern experience If you want, I can also rank these by **best for beginners, best for teams, and best for large podcasts**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
The most reliable podcast hosting platforms are usually the ones with strong uptime, solid RSS delivery, good analytics, and a long track record. Top picks: - **Libsyn** — one of the oldest and most trusted. Very stable, widely used, good for long-term hosting. - **Buzzsprout** — easy to use, polished, and dependable. Great for most solo creators and small shows. - **Captivate** — strong uptime and good podcast-specific tools. Good if you want growth features too. - **Transistor** — excellent reliability, clean interface, good for teams and multiple shows. - **Podbean** — solid all-around host with a long history and good value for money. - **Blubrry** — reliable and especially good if you use WordPress/PowerPress. - **RSS.com** — newer, but very stable and simple, with strong support. If you want the safest “set it and forget it” choices, I’d pick: 1. **Libsyn** 2. **Transistor** 3. **Buzzsprout** If you want, I can also give you: - the **best cheap option** - the **best for beginners** - the **best for large podcasts**
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
The most reliable podcast hosting platforms are generally: - **Libsyn** — one of the oldest and most dependable; great uptime, solid support, very podcast-focused. - **Buzzsprout** — very stable, easy to use, strong analytics, and good support. - **Captivate** — reliable, modern features, good for growing shows and networks. - **Transistor** — excellent uptime and clean, professional hosting for multiple shows. - **Blubrry** — long-time podcast host, solid reliability, especially if you use WordPress. - **Podbean** — dependable and feature-rich, with live streaming and monetization options. **Best picks by need:** - **Most proven/longest track record:** Libsyn - **Easiest for beginners:** Buzzsprout - **Best for multiple podcasts/teams:** Transistor - **Best WordPress integration:** Blubrry If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **analytics**, or **best for monetization**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
The most reliable podcast hosting platforms are usually: 1. **Libsyn** — one of the oldest and most trusted; very stable, strong distribution, good for long-term hosting. 2. **Buzzsprout** — easy to use, very dependable, great support, good for most podcasters. 3. **Transistor** — highly reliable, clean interface, excellent for teams and multiple shows. 4. **Blubrry** — solid uptime and WordPress integration; good if you want a more “pro” setup. 5. **Captivate** — reliable, modern features, strong analytics, good for growth-focused creators. 6. **Podbean** — mature platform with good stability and broad feature set. 7. **Simplecast** — very polished and dependable, especially for larger or branded podcasts. If you want the safest picks: - **Best overall reliability:** **Libsyn** - **Best easiest reliable option:** **Buzzsprout** - **Best for teams/brands:** **Transistor** If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **analytics**, or **best for beginners**.
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for creators?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best podcast hosting platforms for most creators: - **Buzzsprout** — Best overall for beginners and easy publishing. Clean UI, strong analytics, great distribution. - **Libsyn** — Best for long-term serious podcasters. Very reliable, flexible, and widely trusted. - **Captivate** — Best for growth-focused creators. Good marketing tools, private podcasts, and team features. - **Transistor** — Best for multiple shows or businesses. Simple, modern, and good for branded podcast networks. - **RSS.com** — Best budget-friendly option. Easy to use, solid features, good for solo creators. - **Spreaker** — Best for live podcasting and monetization options. Useful if you want live audio and ad tools. - **Acast** — Best for monetization and larger audiences. Strong ad marketplace, more enterprise-oriented. - **Podbean** — Best all-in-one value. Hosting, monetization, and live streaming in one place. **My quick picks:** - **New podcaster:** Buzzsprout - **Best value:** Podbean or RSS.com - **Best pro platform:** Libsyn - **Best for growth:** Captivate - **Best for multiple shows:** Transistor If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **ease of use**, or **monetization**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best podcast hosting platforms for creators, depending on what you need: ### Best overall: **Buzzsprout** - Very easy to use - Great analytics and distribution tools - Strong for beginners and growing shows ### Best for serious creators/teams: **Transistor** - Clean interface - Great for multiple shows and teams - Solid analytics and private podcasting ### Best for monetization: **Captivate** - Built-in monetization tools - Good growth features - Easy website and email capture tools ### Best for long-running/professional shows: **Libsyn** - One of the oldest and most reliable hosts - Strong publishing and distribution - Good if you want proven infrastructure ### Best budget option: **Podbean** - Affordable plans - Unlimited hosting on many tiers - Includes monetization options ### Best free/cheap starting option: **Spotify for Podcasters** - Free hosting - Easy setup - Best if you’re just starting out, though less robust than paid hosts ### Best for simplicity + value: **RSS.com** - Easy to use - Good stats and monetization features - Competitive pricing ## Quick picks - **Beginner:** Buzzsprout or Spotify for Podcasters - **Growth-focused:** Transistor or Captivate - **Budget:** Podbean or RSS.com - **Enterprise/pro:** Libsyn If you want, I can also give you the **best podcast hosts for video podcasts, monetization, or unlimited storage**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best podcast hosting platforms for most creators: ### Best overall **Buzzsprout** - Very easy to use - Great analytics - Solid website/player tools - Good for beginners and growing shows ### Best for monetization **Captivate** - Strong built-in monetization tools - Good for audience growth - Clean dashboard - Better if you want to scale fast ### Best for WordPress users **Libsyn** - One of the oldest, most reliable hosts - Strong distribution - Good if you want long-term stability - Not the prettiest interface, but very capable ### Best free option **Spotify for Podcasters** - Free hosting - Easy setup - Good for new creators testing the waters - Best if you’re okay with fewer advanced features ### Best for advanced creators **Transistor** - Great for multiple podcasts - Strong private podcast support - Clean analytics - Ideal for teams and serious creators ### Best budget-friendly option **Podbean** - Affordable plans - Easy to use - Monetization options - Good all-around value ### Best for all-in-one audio + podcast tools **RSS.com** - Simple setup - Solid for beginners - Good stats and distribution - Often a strong value pick ## Quick picks - **Beginner:** Buzzsprout - **Free:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Monetization:** Captivate - **WordPress/heavy-duty:** Libsyn - **Teams/private shows:** Transistor - **Budget:** Podbean If you want, I can also give you the **best podcast hosting platform based on your budget, audience size, and whether you want monetization**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best podcast hosting platforms for most creators: 1. **Buzzsprout** Best overall for beginners. Easy to use, clean dashboard, solid analytics, and good distribution to all major apps. 2. **Libsyn** Best for experienced podcasters who want reliability and control. Longstanding industry standard with strong publishing tools. 3. **Captivate** Best for growth-focused creators. Strong marketing features, good analytics, private podcasting, and unlimited shows on higher plans. 4. **Transistor** Best for teams, networks, and businesses. Great for multiple podcasts, branded sites, and simple collaboration. 5. **Podbean** Best all-in-one option. Offers hosting, monetization, live streaming, and a built-in podcast app. 6. **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) Best free starter option. Easy to begin, but less flexible than paid platforms. 7. **RSS.com** Best for simple, affordable hosting. Good analytics and easy setup, especially for new creators. ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Buzzsprout - **Best for pros:** Libsyn - **Best for growth/marketing:** Captivate - **Best for teams:** Transistor - **Best free:** Spotify for Creators If you want, I can also give you the **best podcast host based on your budget, audience size, or whether you want monetization**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best podcast hosting platforms for most creators: 1. **Buzzsprout** — best overall for ease of use - Very beginner-friendly - Good analytics, website, and distribution tools - Great if you want simple setup and strong support 2. **Libsyn** — best for established podcasters - One of the oldest and most reliable hosts - Strong monetization and publishing controls - Good for serious podcasters who want stability 3. **Captivate** — best for growth and marketing - Built for audience growth - Solid analytics, private podcasts, and team features - Good if you want a modern, creator-focused platform 4. **Transistor** — best for teams and multiple shows - Clean interface and unlimited team members on many plans - Great for networks, agencies, and businesses - Easy to manage multiple podcasts 5. **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — best free option - Free hosting with easy publishing - Integrated with Spotify - Good for beginners, though less powerful than paid hosts 6. **Podbean** — best for monetization features - Ads, premium content, live streaming, and memberships - Good all-in-one option for creators who want revenue tools 7. **RSS.com** — best value for simple hosting - Easy to use, affordable, and includes podcast website + stats - Good for new creators and small teams **Quick picks:** - **Best for beginners:** Buzzsprout - **Best free:** Spotify for Creators - **Best for serious growth:** Captivate - **Best for teams:** Transistor - **Best for monetization:** Podbean If you want, I can also give you the **best platform for your exact situation** (solo creator, business podcast, video podcast, or monetization-focused).
What podcast hosting options do most people use? 10/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Most people use one of these podcast hosts: - **Spotify for Podcasters** (formerly Anchor) — free, easiest to start - **Buzzsprout** — very popular for beginners - **Libsyn** — one of the oldest and most established - **Podbean** — popular all-in-one option - **Captivate** — good for growth/marketing features - **Transistor** — popular with indie shows and teams - **RSS.com** — simple and affordable - **Simplecast** — often used by professional publishers If you want the **most common beginner picks**, it’s usually **Spotify for Podcasters** or **Buzzsprout**. If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your budget and goals.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Most people use one of these podcast hosts: - **Spotify for Podcasters** (free, very popular for beginners) - **Buzzsprout** (easy, polished, great support) - **Libsyn** (longtime industry standard) - **Podbean** (good all-around, monetization tools) - **Captivate** (modern, creator-focused) - **Transistor** (clean UI, good for teams/brands) - **RSS.com** (simple and solid) - **Blubrry** (popular with WordPress users) - **Simplecast** (more pro-level) If you want the “most common” starter picks: **Spotify for Podcasters**, **Buzzsprout**, and **Podbean**. If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your budget and whether you’re doing solo, business, or video podcasting.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Most people use a handful of big podcast hosts: - **Spotify for Podcasters** (formerly Anchor) — very popular because it’s free and easy to start with. - **Buzzsprout** — one of the most beginner-friendly paid options. - **Libsyn** — long-time industry standard, solid for serious podcasters. - **Captivate** — popular for growth tools and a clean interface. - **Transistor** — great for multiple shows and teams. - **Podbean** — simple, affordable, and widely used. - **RSS.com** — easy setup and good value. - **Acast** — common for monetization and larger audiences. If you want the short version: - **Best free starter:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Best easy paid option:** Buzzsprout - **Best established pro choice:** Libsyn - **Best for teams/multiple shows:** Transistor If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your budget and how serious you are about podcasting.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Most people use a mix of these podcast hosts: - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — very popular for beginners; free and simple - **Buzzsprout** — one of the most common paid options for small/indie podcasters - **Libsyn** — long-time industry standard, especially for established shows - **Podbean** — popular for affordability and easy monetization - **Captivate** — favored by growth-focused indie podcasters - **Transistor** — popular with creators and businesses managing multiple shows - **Acast** — common for larger shows and ad monetization - **RSS.com** — newer, simple, and affordable If you want the most common “starter” choice, go with **Spotify for Creators**. If you want the most common paid beginner-friendly choice, **Buzzsprout** is a great pick. If you want, I can also recommend the best host based on your budget and whether you’re using **Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Most people use one of these podcast hosts: - **Spotify for Creators** (formerly Anchor) — free, easy, good for beginners - **Buzzsprout** — very popular, simple UI, solid analytics - **Libsyn** — one of the oldest, reliable, used by many established shows - **Transistor** — great for multiple podcasts, clean interface - **Podbean** — popular all-in-one option with monetization features - **Captivate** — strong for growing podcasts and marketing tools - **RSS.com** — easy setup, good value - **Simplecast** — more pro-focused, strong analytics and distribution If you want the most common “starter” choices, it’s usually **Spotify for Creators, Buzzsprout, or Podbean**. If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on: - **free vs paid** - **beginner vs professional** - **solo podcast vs network** - **best for YouTube/Spotify growth**
What are the best podcast hosting platforms for launching a show?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best podcast hosting platforms for launching a show: ### Best overall: **Buzzsprout** - Super easy to use - Great for beginners - Strong analytics + built-in distribution - Good website/player tools ### Best for growth: **Captivate** - Excellent marketing tools - Unlimited podcasts and team members on many plans - Strong for solo creators and networks - Good private podcasting options ### Best for Apple/Spotify-style simplicity: **Transistor** - Clean interface - Easy to manage multiple shows - Great if you want a polished, professional setup - Solid analytics and website pages ### Best free/low-cost start: **Spotify for Podcasters** - Free hosting - Easy launch - Good if you want to test a show with minimal cost - Less flexible than paid hosts ### Best for monetization: **Libsyn** - One of the oldest, most trusted hosts - Strong monetization and advanced publishing tools - Good for serious podcasters and businesses ### Best for WordPress users: **Blubrry** - Tight WordPress integration - Reliable hosting + PowerPress plugin - Good if your site is already on WordPress ## My quick picks - **Beginner:** Buzzsprout - **Growth/marketing:** Captivate - **Professional/simple:** Transistor - **Budget:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Advanced/monetization:** Libsyn If you want, I can also give you the **best choice based on your budget, audience size, and whether you want video podcasting**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best podcast hosting platforms for launching a show: ### Best overall **Buzzsprout** - Very beginner-friendly, clean dashboard, great analytics - Easy distribution to Apple, Spotify, etc. - Good for most new podcasters ### Best for growth + marketing **Captivate** - Strong audience growth tools - Private podcasting, dynamic content, solid analytics - Great if you plan to scale ### Best for simplicity **Transistor** - Super clean, easy setup - Unlimited podcasts on many plans - Great for solo creators and brands ### Best for monetization **Podbean** - Built-in ads and paid subscription options - Good if you want to earn from the show early ### Best for advanced users **Libsyn** - Long-time industry standard - Very reliable, flexible, and powerful - Best if you care more about control than design ### Best free option **Spotify for Creators** - Free hosting and simple publishing - Good for testing an idea, but less robust than paid hosts ## My quick picks - **New podcaster:** Buzzsprout - **Business/podcast network:** Transistor or Captivate - **Monetization-focused:** Podbean - **Most established/pro:** Libsyn If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by budget**, or recommend the best one for **solo, interview, or business podcasts**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Best podcast hosting platforms for launching a show: 1. **Spotify for Creators (formerly Anchor)** - Best for: beginners, free start, easy setup - Pros: free hosting, simple publishing, built-in Spotify distribution - Cons: fewer advanced analytics/customization options 2. **Buzzsprout** - Best for: easiest all-around paid option - Pros: very beginner-friendly, great analytics, solid website/player tools - Cons: paid plans can get pricey as you grow 3. **Libsyn** - Best for: serious podcasters who want reliability - Pros: long track record, strong distribution, dependable stats - Cons: interface feels dated 4. **Captivate** - Best for: growth-focused shows and teams - Pros: good marketing tools, multiple shows, listener conversion features - Cons: more expensive than entry-level options 5. **Transistor** - Best for: branded podcasts and networks - Pros: clean interface, multiple podcasts, great private podcast support - Cons: not the cheapest 6. **Podbean** - Best for: all-in-one hosting + monetization - Pros: easy to use, live streaming, monetization tools - Cons: site/tools feel less polished than some competitors **My quick recommendations:** - **Best free start:** Spotify for Creators - **Best overall for most beginners:** Buzzsprout - **Best for long-term reliability:** Libsyn - **Best for teams/brands:** Transistor or Captivate If you want, I can also give you the **best podcast hosts by budget** or **best for WordPress users**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best podcast hosting platforms for launching a show: ### Best overall **Buzzsprout** - Very beginner-friendly - Clean dashboard, easy distribution to Spotify/Apple Podcasts - Good analytics and built-in website - Great if you want the simplest launch path ### Best for all-in-one growth **Captivate** - Strong marketing tools - Unlimited podcasts on many plans - Good for creators who want serious audience growth features - Nice if you expect to scale ### Best budget option **Spotify for Podcasters** - Free hosting - Easy setup - Good for new podcasters testing an idea - Best if you want low cost over premium features ### Best for WordPress users **Blubrry** - Solid podcast hosting - Integrates well with WordPress via PowerPress - Good analytics - Great if your site is on WordPress ### Best for advanced teams / networks **Transistor** - Professional, polished platform - Multiple shows under one account - Strong analytics and private podcasting - Great for brands, startups, and podcast networks ### Best for monetization **Libsyn** - One of the oldest and most established hosts - Strong publishing and monetization options - Reliable for long-term shows - Better for people who want proven infrastructure ### My quick recommendation - **New solo host:** Buzzsprout - **Free starter:** Spotify for Podcasters - **Serious growth:** Captivate - **WordPress site:** Blubrry - **Brand/network:** Transistor If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 based on your budget, experience level, and whether you want monetization**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best podcast hosting platforms for launching a show: 1. **Buzzsprout** Best overall for beginners. Super easy to use, clean dashboard, great analytics, and strong distribution to Apple/Spotify. Good free trial, then paid plans. 2. **Libsyn** Best for serious podcasters who want reliability and long-term value. It’s one of the oldest hosts, very stable, and has solid monetization/distribution tools. 3. **Transistor** Best for branded podcasts and teams. Great for multiple shows, private podcasts, and simple but powerful analytics. Very polished. 4. **Captivate** Best for growth-focused creators. Good marketing tools, listener analytics, and website features. Nice if you want to build an audience fast. 5. **Podbean** Best budget-friendly all-in-one option. Includes hosting, monetization, and live streaming features. Good for creators who want lots of features without complexity. 6. **Spotify for Creators** Best if you want a free, simple start. Easy to publish and distribute, especially if your audience is already on Spotify. Less flexible than dedicated hosts. 7. **RSS.com** Best value for new podcasters. Affordable, straightforward, and includes helpful features like unlimited storage on many plans. ### My quick picks - **Easiest to launch:** Buzzsprout - **Best for growth/branding:** Captivate or Transistor - **Best established pro option:** Libsyn - **Best low-cost choice:** RSS.com or Podbean - **Best free starter:** Spotify for Creators If you want, I can also give you a **“best podcast host for your situation”** recommendation based on your budget, audience size, and goals.

All 72 prompts run for Libsyn

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Libsyn known for?
  • 2 What are Libsyn's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Libsyn? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Libsyn compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Libsyn?
  • 6 What is a typical podcast hosting platform known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for interview podcasts? discovery
  • 2 Which podcast hosting platform is best for a solo show? discovery
  • 3 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for video podcasts? discovery
  • 4 What podcast hosting platforms work well for business podcasts? discovery
  • 5 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for a hobby podcast? discovery
  • 6 Which podcast hosting platforms are good for monetizing a show? discovery
  • 7 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for analytics and listener insights? discovery
  • 8 What podcast hosting platform is best for multiple shows? discovery
  • 9 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for a new podcast network? discovery
  • 10 Which podcast hosting platforms are best for artists and musicians? discovery
  • 11 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for private podcasts? discovery
  • 12 What podcast hosting platform is best for team collaboration? discovery
  • 13 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for teachers and educators? discovery
  • 14 Which podcast hosting platforms are best for nonprofits? discovery
  • 15 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for mobile recording workflows? discovery
  • 16 What podcast hosting platform is best for a seasonal podcast? discovery
  • 17 Which podcast hosting platforms are best for educational series with episodes and transcripts? discovery
  • 18 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for ad-supported podcasts? discovery
  • 19 What podcast hosting platform is best for fast RSS distribution? discovery
  • 20 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for growing an audience? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to a leading podcast hosting platform? comparison
  • 22 Which podcast hosting platform is better for monetization versus analytics? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to a popular podcast hosting service? comparison
  • 24 Which podcast hosting platform is better for beginners or advanced creators? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to a podcast platform with strong analytics? comparison
  • 26 How do podcast hosting platforms compare for distribution features? comparison
  • 27 Which podcast hosting platform is better for free plans versus paid plans? comparison
  • 28 What are the best alternatives to a podcast hosting platform with monetization tools? comparison
  • 29 Which podcast hosting platform is better for small teams versus solo creators? comparison
  • 30 What are the best alternatives to a podcast hosting service with easy setup? comparison
  • 31 How do I choose a podcast hosting platform for RSS distribution? problem
  • 32 How do I get my podcast on all major listening apps? problem
  • 33 How do I host my podcast files and generate an RSS feed? problem
  • 34 How do I track podcast downloads and listener analytics? problem
  • 35 How do I monetize a podcast with ads or subscriptions? problem
  • 36 How do I start a podcast without managing my own server? problem
  • 37 How do I move my podcast to a new hosting platform? problem
  • 38 How do I set up a private podcast for members or employees? problem
  • 39 How do I keep my podcast feed from breaking when I change hosts? problem
  • 40 How do I publish podcast episodes automatically to multiple directories? problem
  • 41 What is the pricing for podcast hosting platforms? transactional
  • 42 Are there free podcast hosting platforms? transactional
  • 43 What is the cheapest podcast hosting platform? transactional
  • 44 Do podcast hosting platforms offer a free trial? transactional
  • 45 What podcast hosting platforms have unlimited storage? transactional
  • 46 How much does podcast hosting cost per month? transactional
  • 47 Which podcast hosting platforms have the best value? transactional
  • 48 What podcast hosting platform has the best paid plan? transactional
  • 49 Are there podcast hosting platforms with no setup fee? transactional
  • 50 What podcast hosting platforms include monetization tools in the price? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for beginners? 720/mo
  • 2 What are the top podcast hosting platforms for creators? 40/mo
  • 3 Which podcast hosting platform is most recommended?
  • 4 What are popular podcast hosting options right now?
  • 5 What is the best podcast hosting platform for independent podcasters?
  • 6 Which podcast hosting platforms are worth using?
  • 7 What are the best podcast hosting services for new shows? 260/mo
  • 8 What podcast hosting platform should I use?
  • 9 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for small podcasts?
  • 10 What are the top-rated podcast hosting services?
  • 11 Which podcast hosting platforms have the best features?
  • 12 What are the most reliable podcast hosting platforms?
  • 13 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for creators?
  • 14 What podcast hosting options do most people use? 10/mo
  • 15 What are the best podcast hosting platforms for launching a show?