How to Start a Podcast for Free in 2026: Beginner Guide
Gary WhittakerCreator Platform Guide
Thinking of Starting Your Own Podcast?
Here Is What You Need to Know—and the Free Way to Get Started
You do not need an expensive microphone, paid hosting or a full video studio to publish a real podcast. You need a clear audience, a repeatable format and a simple launch plan.
Starting a podcast can sound like an expensive project.
You may picture professional microphones, soundproof walls, cameras, mixers, paid hosting, custom music and hours of editing.
Those things can become useful later. They are not required to find out whether your podcast idea is worth developing.
You can plan, record, edit, host and distribute a real podcast using equipment you probably already own and tools available at no cost.
The most important part is not buying a microphone. It is knowing who the show is for, why someone should listen, what each episode will provide and whether you can maintain the format.
The First Question Is Not Which Microphone Should I Buy?
Before choosing equipment, choose the purpose of the show.
A good podcast makes a clear promise to a specific type of listener.
Too general
I want to start a podcast about music and AI.
Clearer
I want to create a short weekly podcast that helps independent AI music creators understand new tools, rights issues and release decisions.
Step 1: Decide Who the Podcast Is For
Avoid saying the podcast is for everyone. A show meant for everyone often becomes too broad to build a loyal audience.
Your listener might be:
- A beginner using Suno for the first time
- An independent artist exploring AI-assisted music
- A songwriter learning new creative tools
- A producer following changes in AI
- A Christian creator discussing faith and music
- A local business owner learning content creation
- A specific professional or creative community
Ask yourself:
- Who do I understand well enough to speak to regularly?
- What questions do those people keep asking?
- What experience or perspective can I provide?
- Why would they choose my show over a general entertainment podcast?
- Can I think of at least ten useful episode ideas for this audience?
Step 2: Choose a Repeatable Podcast Format
A podcast needs a structure you can repeat without rebuilding the entire show every week.
Solo teaching
Explain one subject, answer one question or guide listeners through a process.
Commentary
Respond to news, platform updates, creative work or industry developments.
Interview
Speak with creators, experts, business owners or people with useful experience.
Creator spotlight
Feature one artist, project, business or creative journey in each episode.
Question and answer
Build episodes around questions submitted by listeners or customers.
Project breakdown
Explain how a song, campaign, video or creative project was developed.
The best starting format is usually the one you can explain in one sentence and maintain for at least six episodes.
Step 3: Choose a Realistic Episode Length
There is no universal perfect podcast length. The right length depends on the promise of the show.
8–15 min
Focused solo episode
20–35 min
Teaching or commentary
30–60 min
Interview or detailed discussion
Do not stretch ten minutes of useful material into forty minutes. Do not remove important context to meet an arbitrary time limit.
Step 4: Pick a Schedule You Can Maintain
A reliable biweekly or monthly show is better than an ambitious weekly show that disappears after three episodes.
- Weekly
- Every two weeks
- Twice per month
- Monthly
- Limited seasons of six or eight episodes
Consistency matters more than frequency.
The Free Podcast Setup
- A smartphone or computer
- Wired earbuds or a headset with a microphone
- A quiet room
- Free recording or editing software
- Free podcast hosting
- Simple square cover artwork
- An internet connection
Starting cost: $0
Step 5: Record With Equipment You Already Own
The first microphone you should test is the one you already have.
- Your smartphone
- Wired earbuds with an inline microphone
- A gaming or office headset
- Your laptop microphone
- A basic USB microphone you already own
Your recording environment can matter as much as the microphone.
Improve the recording without spending money
- Close windows and doors
- Turn off fans and noisy appliances
- Silence notifications
- Avoid large empty rooms
- Record near curtains, couches, carpets or other soft materials
- Keep a consistent distance from the microphone
- Record a 30-second test before the full episode
- Listen to the test with headphones
Step 6: Plan the Episode Before Recording
You do not always need a full script. You do need enough structure to avoid wandering before reaching the point.
- Opening question or statement
- Why the subject matters
- Three to five main points
- Example or personal experience
- Main takeaway
- Next action for the listener
- Closing call to action
Example episode
Why Your First AI Song Is Not Automatically Ready for Release
Review structure, lyrics, pronunciation, unwanted similarities, human contribution, brand fit and final release preparation.
Step 7: Record and Edit for Free With Audacity
Audacity is a free, open-source multitrack audio editor and recorder available for Windows, macOS and Linux.
- Record the episode or import the audio file
- Save a working copy before editing
- Remove major mistakes
- Cut long silences
- Reduce obvious background noise carefully
- Balance the volume
- Listen through the full episode
- Export the finished audio
Do not over-process the first episode. Too much noise reduction can make speech sound metallic or distorted.
Visit AudacityStep 8: Keep the Intro Simple
Your intro does not need a dramatic announcer, a long musical opening or a complete biography.
Welcome to The Independent AI Music Creator Podcast. I am Jack, and this show helps creators make better decisions about AI-assisted music, rights, production and release strategy. Today, we are looking at what to check before you release your first song.
Step 9: Create Podcast Artwork
Podcast artwork must remain readable when displayed as a small thumbnail.
- The podcast name
- Large readable text
- Strong contrast
- One main visual idea
- Consistent branding
- A square layout
Avoid several microphones, multiple photos, long descriptions, tiny platform logos and too many colours.
Step 10: Host the Podcast for Free With Spotify for Creators
Spotify for Creators provides free podcast hosting, analytics, audience engagement features and support for audio and video episodes.
- Create or sign into a Spotify account
- Open Spotify for Creators
- Create a new show
- Add the podcast name and description
- Upload the cover artwork
- Upload the first episode
- Complete the episode title and description
- Review the publishing details
- Publish the episode
- Locate and save the RSS feed
Important: Publishing through one host does not always place the show inside every podcast directory automatically. You may still need to submit or claim the show through individual services.
Step 11: Submit the Podcast to Apple Podcasts
Apple allows creators to submit an existing podcast through an RSS feed using Apple Podcasts Connect.
- Sign into Apple Podcasts Connect
- Select the option to add a new show
- Choose Add a show with an RSS feed
- Enter the podcast RSS feed
- Complete the requested account and show information
- Submit the show for validation and review
You do not need to pay merely to submit a normal RSS-hosted podcast to Apple Podcasts. Paid Apple podcast subscriptions are a separate program.
Open Apple Podcasts for CreatorsStep 12: Add the Podcast to YouTube
YouTube allows creators to create a podcast inside YouTube Studio or designate an existing playlist as a podcast.
An audio-first podcast can use:
- Podcast cover artwork
- A static branded image
- A simple waveform
- Captions
- An audiogram
- A basic visual background
- Full video when it adds value
YouTube may also support RSS-feed delivery for eligible creators and regions. Confirm current availability inside your account before depending on it.
Open YouTube StudioWhat You Should Not Buy Yet
- A $300 microphone
- An audio interface
- A mixing console
- Multiple cameras
- Studio lights
- Paid podcast hosting
- A custom podcast website
- A professional announcer
- A paid theme song
- Acoustic foam covering every wall
- A full video studio
- Several editing subscriptions
At the beginning, spending can become a form of avoidance. Publish before you upgrade.
Audio-Only or Video Podcast?
Audio-first advantages
- Easier recording
- Less equipment
- Faster editing
- Less concern about appearance
- More focus on the conversation
Video advantages
- More YouTube content
- More short-form clips
- Stronger visual connection
- Better demonstrations
- More social-media options
Start with what you can maintain. Add video when it supports the content rather than treating it as a requirement.
Important Music and Copyright Considerations
A podcast is not automatically allowed to use any song the creator can find online.
Do not assume you can use commercial music as an introduction, background track, outro, transition or complete song segment.
Safer options
- Music you created and control
- Music you commissioned with clear permission
- Properly licensed royalty-free music
- Public-domain material when its status is confirmed
- Music supplied through a service whose licence covers podcast use
Using AI-generated music
- Check the platform's current terms
- Confirm whether the plan used allows commercial use
- Record when the track was generated
- Document uploaded material, lyrics and samples
- Avoid imitating an identifiable artist
- Document your own creative decisions
- Confirm the music is suitable for monetized podcast use
Should You Use AI to Write the Podcast?
AI can help with episode ideas, research organization, outlines, guest questions, descriptions, chapter headings, titles and social posts.
It should not remove your judgment or replace the reason people chose to listen to you.
Plan Your First Three Episodes Before Launching
Episode 1
Explain why the podcast exists
Episode 2
Deliver immediate value
Episode 3
Demonstrate the normal format
Example first three episodes for an AI music creator
- Why I Started Creating Music With AI
- The Biggest Mistake I Made With My First Suno Songs
- How I Decide Whether an AI-Generated Song Is Worth Finishing
How to Name the Podcast
A podcast name should be easy to say, spell and remember. It should relate to the subject and remain flexible enough to support future episodes.
Before committing, search Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, Google, social platforms, domain registrations and relevant trademarks.
A Small Focused Audience Can Still Be Valuable
You do not need millions of listeners for a podcast to matter.
- Develop trust
- Build authority around a subject
- Improve your speaking
- Meet collaborators
- Promote your music
- Grow an email list
- Support consulting or creative services
- Build a searchable library of ideas
One hundred relevant listeners may be more useful than thousands of people who have no connection to your subject.
Your Free Podcast Launch Checklist
Define the show
- Identify the audience
- Choose the problem or interest
- Select the format
- Choose a schedule
- Write ten episode ideas
Prepare the brand
- Confirm the name
- Search for conflicts
- Create square artwork
- Write the description
- Prepare a short host bio
Prepare the first episodes
- Plan a trailer
- Outline episode one
- Plan episodes two and three
- Create a reusable structure
- Choose a closing CTA
Publish and promote
- Upload the artwork
- Upload the episode
- Save the RSS feed
- Submit to directories
- Share one useful takeaway
The Free Podcast Starter Setup
Recording: A phone, headset, earbuds or computer microphone
Editing: Audacity
Artwork: A free design platform or editor
Hosting: Spotify for Creators
Apple distribution: Apple Podcasts Connect
YouTube distribution: YouTube Studio or supported RSS delivery
Starting cost: $0
The Most Important First Goal
Your first goal is not getting sponsors, reaching a chart or buying the microphone used by a famous host.
Your first goal is to publish one useful episode.
Your second goal is to publish another.
Your third goal is to learn what should improve before episode three.
Final Advice
Start Small Enough to Continue
Define the audience. Choose one repeatable format. Record a useful first episode with what you already own. Publish it using free tools. Then improve based on what you learn.
ASK JACK
Have a Podcast Question?
Questions about your format, audience, equipment, AI music, show name or first episodes are welcome.
Email info@jackrighteous.com
Use the subject line: ASK JACK: Podcast Question
The Righteous Beat
Get More Creator Guidance
Join the newsletter for practical guidance on AI music, creator rights, content development, digital ownership and building a stronger creative platform.
Join The Righteous Beat