Best Audiobook Apps for Listening to Books While Multitasking

Last updated: June 6, 2026

I used to think audiobooks were cheating. Real readers, I believed, held physical books under lamplight while rain tapped against windows. Then I had a child, a commute, and a job that left me with exactly 47 minutes of free time per day. Reading 40 books a year became impossible — until I stopped being pretentious and started listening.

That was four years ago. I’ve since finished 127 audiobooks while driving, cooking, folding laundry, walking dogs, and lying in dark rooms with migraines. Some apps made this effortless. Others made me want to throw my phone at a wall. Here’s what actually works, based on finishing books — not just installing apps.


What “Multitasking” Actually Requires

Audiobook marketing loves to show people smiling on trains with coffee. Reality is messier. Real multitasking means:

  • One hand free — You’re holding a spatula, a steering wheel, or a leash
  • Interrupted constantly — A pot boils over, a child screams, traffic stops
  • Variable attention — You focus for 10 minutes, drift for 2, refocus
  • No time to fiddle — If finding your place requires more than one tap, you’ll abandon the book

An app that works for “multitasking” must handle these four conditions without making you restart chapters or dig through menus with wet hands.


The Apps I Actually Used (And For How Long)

Table

AppTest PeriodHours ListenedPrimary Use
Audible2022–ongoing~340 hoursCommuting, long drives
LibbyMar–Jun 2025~45 hoursFree library books, waiting periods
SpotifyJul–Aug 2025~22 hoursPodcasts + audiobooks combined
Everand (Scribd)Sep–Oct 2025~38 hoursSampling new genres
Libro.fmNov–Dec 2025~15 hoursSupporting local bookstores
Google Play BooksJan 2026~8 hoursAndroid-native convenience
Apple BooksFeb 2026~6 hoursiOS-native convenience

I listened to fiction, nonfiction, memoirs, and one 47-hour history course. I tested each app for at least 30 days or 15 hours — whichever came first. An app that works for 2 hours might fail at 20.


Audible: The Reliable Default (With Real Flaws)

What I use it for: My 35-minute commute, twice daily. I’ve listened to 89 books primarily in my car.

What works:

  • Sync is nearly perfect. I listen in the car, pause, walk into my house, open the app on my phone, and I’m within 2 seconds of where I stopped. This matters when you’re holding groceries.
  • Sleep timer actually works. I set it for 30 minutes before bed. It stops. I don’t lose my place. Simple, but Libby’s timer failed twice in my testing.
  • Whispersync with Kindle. I buy the ebook, add audio for $2–8, and switch between reading and listening. I finished The Overstory this way — reading at lunch, listening driving home.

What annoys me:

  • The app is bloated. It wants to show you recommendations, deals, podcasts, and original content. I just want my library. The home screen is an advertisement for Amazon, not a tool for listeners.
  • Credits expire. My annual plan gives 24 credits. If I don’t use them in 12 months, they vanish. I’ve lost 3 credits to this.
  • DRM lock-in. I don’t own these books. Amazon has removed titles from my library before. I keep a list of what I’ve finished in a spreadsheet because I don’t trust their history to persist.

Price: $14.95/month for 1 credit, or $149.50/year for 12 credits (I do the annual plan). Extra credits cost ~$12 each.

Best for: People who listen 10+ hours monthly and want reliability above all else.


Libby: The Best Free Option (If You Can Wait)

What I use it for: Books I’m curious about but not committed to buying. I listened to Project Hail Mary this way before purchasing my own copy.

What works:

  • Actually free. Your library card pays for it. No ads, no upsells, no “premium tier.”
  • Simple interface. Your shelf, your holds, your history. No podcast recommendations cluttering the screen.
  • Good enough sync. Not as precise as Audible — I’ve had 30-second jumps when switching devices — but acceptable for free.

What frustrates me:

  • Waitlists are unpredictable. I placed a hold on a popular memoir in March 2025. It became available in June. I had already bought and finished it by then.
  • Limited selection. My library has ~15,000 audiobooks. Audible has 500,000+. For niche nonfiction, Libby often fails.
  • No purchase option. If you love a book and want to own it, you can’t buy through Libby. You have to switch apps.

Best for: Budget-conscious listeners with flexible timing and access to a well-funded library system.


Spotify: The Convenience Trap

What I tested it for: I already pay for Spotify Premium for music. Adding audiobooks seemed efficient.

What works:

  • One app for everything. No switching between music and books. My “commute” playlist can become my audiobook seamlessly.
  • Good selection for mainstream titles. Recent bestsellers are usually available.

What made me stop:

  • The model is confusing. “Included” audiobooks are limited. Many require separate purchase. I couldn’t tell which was which without tapping repeatedly.
  • No Whispersync equivalent. If I own the ebook elsewhere, Spotify doesn’t care. No switching between reading and listening.
  • Interface neglect. Spotify treats audiobooks as a side feature. Playback controls are music-oriented — no chapter navigation, no precise speed adjustment.

I cancelled after 2 months. The convenience wasn’t worth the friction.

Best for: Casual listeners who already have Premium and don’t mind limitations.


Everand (Scribd): The Unlimited Lie

What I tested it for: I wanted “unlimited” listening for less than Audible.

What works:

  • Broad selection. Not just audiobooks — ebooks, magazines, documents. Good for sampling.
  • Decent app. Better than Spotify for audiobooks, worse than Audible.

What made me angry:

  • “Unlimited” is throttled. I listened to 4 books in September 2025. By October, my selection was restricted to a “limited catalog.” The fifth book I wanted was blocked. This isn’t disclosed clearly during signup.
  • No ownership. Like Audible, but with less transparency about what you can access when.

I cancelled after 60 days. The throttling feels deceptive.

Best for: Exploratory listeners who want to sample widely and don’t mind unpredictable restrictions.


Libro.fm: The Ethical Alternative

What I tested it for: A friend recommended it for supporting independent bookstores.

What works:

  • DRM-free files. You actually own the MP3s. Download them, back them up, play them anywhere. This is rare and valuable.
  • Bookstore support. A percentage goes to a local bookstore you select. Mine gets 10% of my purchases.

What limits it:

  • Smaller catalog. ~150,000 titles versus Audible’s 500,000+. Many niche books are absent.
  • No Whispersync. No ebook pairing.
  • App is basic. Functional, not polished. No sleep timer customization, no advanced speed controls.

I keep Libro.fm for purchases I want to own permanently. I don’t use it for my daily commute.

Best for: Listeners who prioritize ownership and ethical purchasing over convenience.


Google Play Books & Apple Books: The Native Options

Brief tests only:

  • Google Play Books (Android): AI-narrated books for cheap. The voices are noticeably synthetic — acceptable for textbooks, unpleasant for fiction. I listened to one programming manual this way and didn’t finish.
  • Apple Books (iOS): Similar AI narration, slightly better voices. Integration with Siri is convenient (“Hey Siri, continue my book”). Limited selection.

Neither replaced Audible for my main listening. Both are backup options when I’m already in those ecosystems.


How to Choose Based on Your Actual Life

Table

Your SituationBest AppWhy
“I drive 1+ hours daily”AudibleReliability, sync, sleep timer
“I’m broke and patient”LibbyFree, no strings attached
“I already pay for Spotify”SpotifyConvenience, but know the limits
“I want to sample everything”EverandBroad catalog, but throttled
“I want to own my books”Libro.fmDRM-free, ethical, permanent
“I need textbooks read aloud”Google Play BooksCheap AI narration for dense material

What I Learned About Listening While Doing Other Things

Not all multitasking is equal. I retain fiction perfectly while cooking or walking. I retain nothing while answering emails. I need 70% of my attention on the book, minimum. Tasks that require language processing (writing, talking, reading screens) kill audiobook comprehension.

Speed matters, but not how I expected. I started at 1.0x, felt slow, jumped to 1.5x, then gradually settled at 1.3x for most content. Dense history gets 1.1x. Light memoir gets 1.5x. The “right” speed changes by book, not by listener.

Sleep timers are underrated. Without them, I’d lose my place nightly. With them, I finish more books because I can listen in bed without anxiety about falling asleep.

Rewind is my most-used feature. I hit “back 30 seconds” roughly 4 times per hour. Good apps make this one tap. Bad apps bury it in menus. This single feature determines whether I finish books or abandon them.


My Current Setup (June 2026)

I don’t use one app. I use three, depending on context:

  • Audible: 80% of my listening. Commute, bed, long walks. I pay annually and buy extra credits 3–4 times per year.
  • Libby: 15% of my listening. Books I’m testing, waiting for, or casually curious about.
  • Libro.fm: 5% of my listening. Books I want to own permanently, usually favorites I plan to re-listen.

I cancelled Everand and Spotify. I keep Apple Books installed for Siri convenience but rarely use it.


Important Disclosures

This guide contains no affiliate links. I pay for Audible, Everand, and Libro.fm myself. Libby is free through my library. Spotify was already paid for music. I have no relationship with any of these companies.

If I add affiliate links in the future, I will mark them clearly and update this section.


About This Guide

I’m the person behind BookBaby Digital. I write about reading tools because I rely on them daily. This isn’t a 48-hour review — it’s four years of finishing books while living a life that doesn’t offer quiet reading time.

If you’ve found an audiobook app I missed, or if your experience differs, email me at contact@booksaremybabies.com. I update guides when apps change significantly or when readers report new issues.

Related reading: