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How to transfer your iTunes library & playlists to a new computer

If you use an iPod, iTouch, or iPhone and plan on getting a new computer, you will want to read this article! OR, if you use any of these devices and want to make sure your library stays safe, you will want to read this article!

Yesterday, I helped a customer setup a new Windows 7 computer and transfer email, favorites, and other data from his old Windows XP computer. Turns out that he also needed to move his iTunes library of more than 8,000 songs and almost 150 playlists!

There isn’t too much I panic about when I arrive at a customer’s home or office, but moving large, customized iTunes libraries is something that does get me a little nervous. In the past, I have had to open an iTunes XML file in a word processor and then use find and replace to enter the path to the storage location on the new computer. It was extremely difficult and tedious.

I am happy to report that I successfully transferred the entire 36 gigabyte library and playlists using the following technique:

  1. On the old computer, open iTunes
  2. Click Edit –> Preferences from the menus
  3. Click the Advanced tab
  4. Click the check box next to Keep iTunes Media folder organized (if it isn’t already)
  5. Click OK
  6. Click File –> Library –> Organize Library (if the box wasn’t checked, be prepared to wait for a few a minutes as iTunes organizes your library).
  7. Now close iTunes and copy your entire My Music folder to an external hard drive, or you can do as I did and pull the hard drive from the old computer and use an USB hard drive adaptor to connect it to the new computer.
  8. DON’T COPY THE MUSIC TO THE NEW COMPUTER YET.
  9. Instead, download and install iTunes on the new computer
  10. Start iTunes and repeat steps 2-5 (above)
  11. Close iTunes
  12. Open the Music folder on the new computer
  13. You should see an iTunes folder, double-click it
  14. Now you will see either an iTunes Music or iTunes Media folder (doesn’t matter what name it has)
  15. Click one time on the folder and delete it
  16. Connect your backup hard drive to the new computer and navigate to the My Music folder and open it
  17. Push Ctrl+A on your keyboard to select all contents in the My Music folder
  18. Drag the files to the Music folder on the new computer
  19. Click yes when asked if you want to overwrite any existing files with the same name
  20. Close open Windows
  21. Start iTunes and your libary, including playlists, should be there.

Good luck!

For those of you with a DVD burner on your system (most systems built after 2006 include a DVD burner), you can backup your iTunes library and info via DVD using these steps:

  1. Make sure you have 5-20 blank DVDs (DVD-R or DVD+R) on hand for the backup
  2. Start iTunes
  3. Click File –> Library –> Backup to Disk from menus
  4. Click Back Up button
  5. Follow on-screen instructions.

To restore the backup:

  1. Start iTunes
  2. Insert the first DVD in the backup set
  3. Follow on-screen instructions
Links to Apple’s official instructions on this process:
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126 thoughts on “How to transfer your iTunes library & playlists to a new computer”

  1. I could kiss you. This morning, I was head down on my desk, despairing over countless foreseen hours of manually rebuilding playlists for my new computer. Thank you so much for the step-by-step, accurate intructions!

  2. I actually found a simpler way of transferring my iTunes Playlist onto a new computer;
    1) Transfer your entire music library onto a external Flash Drive.
    2) Open the iTunes .xml files located usually in the Music File on the old computer.
    3) Copy this .xml file onto a Flash Drive (I have 56,000 songs, so my file was 3.7gb).
    4) Install a new copy of iTunes onto the new computer.
    5) Import your music to the new iTunes.
    6) Open the new iTunes, on the new computer. Goto File> Library> Import Playlist.
    7)This will open a new Window in the iTunes. Goto Itunes Music Library.xml and press enter.
    8) Done.

    1. James,
      Seems like a great suggestion! Only thing is that my .xml file is only just over 2 MB and I have a few hundred songs and 4 movies.

      What am I doing wrong?

      thanks!
      Jeremy

      1. If you follow the steps exactly in the article, you should be good to go. The two keys are to make sure the old computer has the newest version of iTunes and you have done all the other steps. One other goofy thing that has happened is that Apple keeps changing the music storage from iTunes Media –> Music to iTunes Music, etc. Watch those folder names. If you have a lot of playlists, that seems to be the biggest stumbling block, but this method will work, but I have had to use the File –> Add Folder to get the content to properly assimilate at times. Good luck.

  3. Thank you SO…. much! I was so disappointed when I got my new computer and couldn’t find my playlists. WOOHOO!

    Thanks you for the fantastic instructions.

  4. Could you not use a double-headed usb cable to do this instead of buying an external hard drive? I looked at some of these and they were pretty expensive. Is it not simpler just to go computer to computer directly than the extra step of the drive? Or are you just talking about a 4 or 8 GB thumb drive? (is there a difference? Sorry for the newbie-ness of that question…)

  5. I used James’ simple set of instructions from above and it worked a treat. THANK-YOU SO MUCH. Just a pity apple seem to make things so tricky and hard for the users.

  6. I have windows 8 (hate it) and 131gb library. I am having huge problems with this. I can’t seem to get a file that includes playlists and library. I tried home sharing. I tried file sharing. I tried copying onto an external hard drive and then copying onto new computer. I keep winding up with no playlists and no artwork. I don’t even have artwork for apps and books. Don’t know what I am doing wrong. Don’t expect help. Just needed to vent, I guess.

  7. I have all of my iTunes in an external hard drive and want to keep it there. My laptop with Windows 7 crashed, so we
    had to start again from zero as if it was a new computer. I downloaded the latest version of iTunes. And it is empty. How do I transfer my 3600 songs, all of my playlists, album covers to the laptop without losing my playlists or losing album covers or getting duplicate songs. (These have happened to me before)Remember I want to keep my iTunes on an external drive.

    1. In the Preferences of iTunes, click Advanced, then under iTunes Media folder location, you can set the location of your media to be any drive you desire. Good luck!

      1. I had done that already. That is not my problem. All 3600 songs were transferred to iTunes. My rpoblem is that 350 of my songs got duplicated and the second problem is that I lost all my playlists and a lot of my album covers.

        1. I have the same problem. The songs transferred but were duplicated. The playlists did not transfer. I followed the instructions in the article. What am I missing?

  8. Hey Rick, just wanted to point out that as long as the collection was purchased only from the iTunes store that the content can be re-downloaded on the new machine once iTunes has been installed and signed into. It really simplifies things and allows for a fully fresh library on each computer. Check out http://support.apple.com/kb/PH1706?viewlocale=en_US for more information on specifics on how to do it.

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