Taking your iTunes library out with you on an Android smartphone or tablet is no longer the impossible mission it used to be—there are a number of apps and services that can help, including Apple’s first major Android app. We’ll go through the various options so you can choose the one that works best for you.

Apple Music for Android is still very much a beta application—and you have to offer up $10 a month to use it—but as it’s an official Apple app, it represents the most straightforward way of getting at all the music you’ve purchased through the iTunes interface from an Android device.
Spotify

Spotify has an option to import local files from your computer: It’s under Preferences on the Edit menu in the desktop application. Choose your iTunes folder and all of the relevant tracks will be available in the desktop app and through the mobile apps (including the Android one).
Google Play Music

If you want to save yourself $10 a month, Google Play Music will do the job for you (whether or not you pay for the unlimited streaming part of the service). The downside is you can’t move playlists over directly, but tracks can be transferred easily enough, even those purchased directly from iTunes.
Copy and paste

You might not have realized it, but if you highlight a playlist of tracks in iTunes and then click Edit and Copy, you can paste the actual files (whatever their actual location) to a different folder on your system—in this case a folder on your Android device, once you’ve plugged it into your computer.
Third-party syncing apps

The likes of Dropbox and Google Drive will sync files from your iTunes folder to your Android device and you can even play individual songs from within the apps. However, getting the files into the Music folder on your phone or tablet isn’t easy, so it doesn’t really work for more than a handful of songs.
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