This is the universal build of Ringdroid 2.3. It contains native libraries for every CPU architecture (arm64-v8a, armeabi-v7a, x86, x86_64), so it installs on any Android device. The trade-off is size — it's larger than per-architecture variants. Pick this one if you're unsure which CPU your phone has, or if you plan to share the APK with multiple devices.
File size: 0.3 MB • Min Android: 3 • Version code: 20300 • Framework: Native (Java/Kotlin) • Permissions: 4
File Information
| Package Name | com.ringdroid |
|---|---|
| Version Name | 2.3 |
| Version Code | 20300 |
| Architecture | Universal |
| Min Android Version | Android 3 (API None) |
| Main Activity | com.ringdroid.RingdroidSelectActivity |
| Framework | Native (Java/Kotlin) |
| File Size | 310.00 KB |
| Signature (SHA1) | 4E2D37A7080748F3789C3A2CB6E4D420CED49DDE |
| File Hash (SHA256) | 876c4d13d4bcf6d56af62a821ae2267c245d77e17040103b4853d7efa53bbfe6 |
App Description
From version
2.7.4
:
The original open-source ringtone editor for Android, first published in 2008 and downloaded by millions of users worldwide.
Ringdroid lets you create personal ringtones, alarms, and notification sounds from existing music/audio files and record new ones using your Android device.
This app is the only 'official' distribution of the Ringdroid open-source project; it does not, and never will, contain ads.
Google Play Store automatically presents the correct Ringdroid update to install with your Android system:
Ringdroid 2.7.3 is recommended for Android system versions 4.1 ('Jelly Bean') and higher. It includes the ability to read OGG Vorbis audio files, and it saves ringtones in AAC (.m4a) format.
Ringdroid 2.6 is recommended for Android system versions 3.0 ('Honeycomb') through 4.0.3 ('Ice Cream Sandwich'). It includes user interface features such as 'pinch-to-zoom'.
Ringdroid 2.5 continues to be recommended for earlier Android system versions.
Note: this app requests access to your contacts, but solely for the purpose of setting contact-specific ringtones. Source code is available at ringdroid.com.
2.7.4
:
The original open-source ringtone editor for Android, first published in 2008 and downloaded by millions of users worldwide.
Ringdroid lets you create personal ringtones, alarms, and notification sounds from existing music/audio files and record new ones using your Android device.
This app is the only 'official' distribution of the Ringdroid open-source project; it does not, and never will, contain ads.
Google Play Store automatically presents the correct Ringdroid update to install with your Android system:
Ringdroid 2.7.3 is recommended for Android system versions 4.1 ('Jelly Bean') and higher. It includes the ability to read OGG Vorbis audio files, and it saves ringtones in AAC (.m4a) format.
Ringdroid 2.6 is recommended for Android system versions 3.0 ('Honeycomb') through 4.0.3 ('Ice Cream Sandwich'). It includes user interface features such as 'pinch-to-zoom'.
Ringdroid 2.5 continues to be recommended for earlier Android system versions.
Note: this app requests access to your contacts, but solely for the purpose of setting contact-specific ringtones. Source code is available at ringdroid.com.
Download Ringdroid APK
Fast, free and safe download.
APK Permissions 4
- android.permission.INTERNET
- android.permission.READ_CONTACTS
- android.permission.WRITE_CONTACTS
- android.permission.WRITE_SETTINGS
APK Verified
The cryptographic signature guarantees that the file is safe to install and was not tampered with in any way.
Similar in Video Players
Frequently Asked Questions about Ringdroid APK
This is the universal variant — a single APK that contains native libraries for every CPU architecture. It installs on any Android device but is larger than per-architecture variants.
Yes — the APK's signature has been cryptographically verified against the publisher's signing key. The SHA-256 hash is shown in the File Information panel so you can independently confirm the file matches the original release.
Android 3 (API level None) or newer. Older devices will refuse the install.
Install a free app like 'CPU-Z' or 'Droid Hardware Info' from the Play Store and look at the ABI / Instruction Set row. Most phones made after 2017 are arm64-v8a; if in doubt, download the universal variant.
All variants are functionally identical — same features, same version. They differ only in which CPU architectures the native code is compiled for, and (sometimes) which screen densities the included graphics target. Pick the one that matches your device for the smallest install size, or pick 'Universal' if you're unsure.