Short answer: no, and it's worth understanding why, because the reason actually matters for whether it works at all.
The Safe and Sound Protocol isn't "calming music" you can rip as an MP3 and play on any speaker. It's specifically filtered audio, engineered to emphasize certain frequency ranges the way a natural, safe human voice would sound, and it only works as designed when delivered through the calibrated Unyte app, on real headphones, at the intended volume. A generic download, even if you found one, would be missing the actual mechanism the protocol depends on. It would just be music.
This isn't a licensing technicality for its own sake. SSP has real contraindications, a handful of conditions like uncontrolled seizures, active psychosis, or severe tinnitus need a doctor's clearance before starting, because the protocol genuinely shifts your nervous system state. A free, unscreened download removes the one part of this that actually protects people: the safety check before you begin. That screening is the reason delivery happens through certified providers instead of an open file.
If you're searching for a free download, there's a good chance what you actually want is just an affordable way in, not a workaround. That's a completely fair thing to want, and it's exactly the gap self-serve access is built for: no in-person clinic overhead, no consultation call required first, just app access and a quick safety screening.
Affordable and free aren't the same problem. One is a pricing question, and that one has a real answer.
Self-serve access here is a one-time ₹7,999 for three months, no subscription, nothing auto-renews. It includes the real app, delivered under an active Unyte provider license, plus email support. If you'd rather have a person alongside you while you go through it, Naadham adds weekly live calls and a paced course for ₹25,000.
Does this sound like you? →See pricing for ADHD & focus → · See pricing for childhood trauma →