Deezer AI Music Detector: This Is How Much AI Music Is Actually in Your Playlists
44% of All Songs Uploaded to Deezer Daily Are AI-Generated, and the Tool That Exposes It Is Free
Deezer has released a free AI Music Detector that flags AI-generated songs in your playlists. It works across all major streaming platforms, not just Deezer. Anyone who wants to know how much human-made music is actually left in their playlists, or wants to run a check on their own tracks, just uploads their playlists and gets the results. The numbers behind it are genuinely alarming.
Deezer AI Music Detector: How the Free Tool Identifies AI Music in Your Playlists
What the Deezer AI Music Detector Does
The concept of the AI Music Detector is straightforward. Pick your streaming service, let Deezer scan your playlists, and get a breakdown of which songs are AI-generated. The tool is free, requires no Deezer account, and works across all major platforms, so Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music and the rest. Nice.

The system works with 99.8% accuracy. Generative AI software leaves specific artifacts in audio signals, and Deezer’s scanner picks them up. Two out of every thousand AI tracks get missed, and fewer than one in ten thousand genuine recordings gets incorrectly flagged. For automated detection at this scale, that’s remarkably precise.
The Numbers You Need to Know
Deezer tagged over 13.4 million AI-generated tracks on its own platform in 2025. Wow. Every day, 75,000 new AI songs are uploaded, which works out to 44% of all daily uploads. This isn’t a fringe problem anymore. It’s structural.
There’s one number in particular that matters for musicians and producers: up to 85% of AI streams are fraudulent. AI-generated music is frequently tied to stream manipulation. Deezer filters and demonetizes fake streams to push back against that, but the broader picture is clear.
In plain terms: AI music isn’t just eating into streaming share, it’s actively distorting how royalties flow. Anyone who depends on streaming income, or who relies on algorithmic playlist placement to reach listeners, is competing against a growing volume of automatically generated content that’s often being artificially streamed on top of that.
What Listeners Actually Think
80% of users think AI-generated music should be clearly labeled. 73% want to know whether their streaming platform is recommending AI music to them. 45% would filter out fully AI-generated music from their recommendations entirely. What do you think? Drop your take in the comments, genuinely curious to hear different perspectives on this one.
Deezer has already acted on its own platform: AI music is excluded from algorithmic and editorial recommendations, and tracks are labeled in the interface. No other major streaming platform has introduced comparable measures so far.
What This Means for Musicians and Producers
97% of people can’t tell the difference between an AI-generated song and a human-made one. That’s partly a quality argument for AI music, and partly a serious problem for the broader ecosystem. If listeners can’t tell the difference, most of them will just hear whatever the algorithm serves up. And the algorithm is getting flooded with AI content.
The Deezer tool is a first practical step in the right direction. Whether it catches every edge case and how well it handles AI-generated elements mixed into otherwise human-made tracks is an open question. But for musicians who want to understand what environment their own songs are landing in on streaming platforms, this is at least a real look at the actual situation. Whether other platforms follow with similar transparency measures remains to be seen. It would be about time.
