Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. News

Gen Z is fueling an iPod comeback

Young people are hunting down the players their parents once used.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Apple iPod Shuffle
Apple iPod Shuffle Apple

Gen Z is breathing new life into the iPod. Young people are now checking eBay and Facebook Marketplace for the very devices their parents carried around a decade ago.

The numbers prove it. Google Trends data shows search interest for the original iPod and the iPod Nano jumped last year, even though Apple killed the product line in 2022. Between January and October 2025, eBay saw searches for the iPod Classic rise 25% and the iPod Nano climb 20% compared to the same period in 2024. Internal eBay figures shared with Axios tell the story.

Recommended Videos

For a generation raised on endless streaming and constant notifications, the reason is simple. They want out.

Young buyers want a break from the noise

With iPods, you can take it with you on walks when your phone gets too much, especially if you just want to listen to music without having to deal with the 20 notifications that come with a smartphone.

Cal Newport, a computer science professor who wrote “Digital Minimalism,” sees a clear pattern. Old tech like the iPod does one thing, he explains. A smartphone throws music, messages, social feeds and news into one device, making it nearly impossible to keep your use in check. The iPod just plays the songs you put on it.

The pull of slower times and physical limits

For young people, the iPod also carries real emotional weight. Some who received secondhand players for Christmas say the appeal runs deeper than just music. Gen Z and young adults face so much uncertainty that clinging to objects from more hopeful times makes sense. The iPod represents that kind of comfort.

Others started using Classics over the holidays after hunting them down online. The experience feels almost healing. Playing music with the sole purpose of listening, with no ads or apps or distractions, makes the brain feel new.

The trend even has a name: Friction-maxxing. The idea is that younger people are choosing hands-on experiences over algorithmic ease. Loading songs onto an iPod one by one instead of letting Spotify serve up a playlist brings meaning back to the act of listening. The culture is shifting away from total seamless convenience.

Streaming is safe, but the old ways are finding new fans

None of this means streaming is dying. US on-demand audio streaming hit 1.4 trillion songs in 2025, up from 1.3 trillion the year before according to Luminate, an industry data firm. The iPod crowd is still a niche next to the Spotify masses.

But the demand for dedicated music players is real. Students are even using iPods to work around phone bans at school, the New York Times recently reported. The devices offer a legal way to get music without the pull of a smartphone.

The bottom line is simple. What goes around comes back around, click wheel and all. For young people burned out on constant connectivity, an old iPod from Facebook Marketplace might be the best digital detox you can buy right now.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
OpenAI’s poaching from Apple hints at ChatGPT-powered wearables coming for your face
Apple's Vision Pro hardware chief is joining OpenAI, adding more fuel to speculation that the ChatGPT maker is getting serious about AI wearables.
openai-wearable

OpenAI's hardware ambitions just got a major boost, and it could be another clue that the company is preparing to take AI beyond smartphones and laptops. Paul Meade, Apple's longtime engineering leader behind the Vision Pro headset and its upcoming smart glasses efforts, is leaving Cupertino to join OpenAI's hardware division.

Another Apple hardware veteran joins OpenAI

Read more
In the last hours of Prime Day, I found the best deals to save you the regret of missing out
A few more hours, a lot of good deals, and no time left to overthink it.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Prime Day 2026 officially ends today, and while some deals are already sold out, I've sifted through the entire website to find the best ones that are still live. Below are the picks I'd confidently put my own money on. They include everything from mid-range Android smartphones to flagship foldables, bone-conduction earbuds to Bose, and smartwatches across every price bracket. Act fast, before the clock runs out.

Best Amazon Prime Day deals on smartphones

Read more
A cardiologist told me that wearable health should be quiet. RingConn’s Gen 3 smart ring embodies that mantra.
Body Part, Finger, Hand

When I first got my hands on a smart ring years ago, I was extremely skeptical. Is the sensor accurate? What about the fragility? Can they match the biosensing chops of smartwatches? And more such doubts kept swirling through my mind. The underlying tech, on the other hand, has evolved dramatically.

Yet, as the technology evolved, so did the consumer requirements and the trust requirements. Can a smart ring truly blend into your lifestyle without making any compromises? I am currently testing the RingConn Gen 3 smart ring, and so far, it has emerged as the most holistic and feature-packed product of its kind. I’ve tested over half a dozen smart rings in the past year alone , so I don’t make such claims lightly. 

Read more