Spotify says price increases are part of its plan going forward.
What you need to know
- Spotify prices are going up by 20% this month.
- The company is raising prices on its Student, Duo, and Family plans today.
- A later price increase is expected to push up its Premium Individual plans.
Spotify today announced price hikes for Premium customers around in Europe this morning. As per TechRadar, the company detailed these increases in an email sent around to customers this morning. Subscribers to Premium Student will see their payments being raised from £4.99 to £5.99, Premium Duo will see theirs going from £12.99 to £13.99, and Premium Family going from £14.99 to £16.99. Android Police reports that a price rise of £1 to the Premium Individual plan is also being considered, though the company has yet to announce that. The price increase will come into effect from April 30, 2021. Existing customers will keep their pricing till June, however.
Reactions to the price increase are as expected, with many customers expressing their disdain for the concept. Others have pointed out concerns with Spotify's payouts to artists, as well as the value Spotify as a service holds when compared to competing services from Apple and Google which push music as a part of an all-encompassing subscription, rather than a whole.
As much as people love Spotify, you have to wonder just how sticky it is. £2/mo more gets you family Apple Music, 200 GB iCloud, Arcade and TV+ https://t.co/ILRyozzSX7
— Benjamin Mayo (@bzamayo) April 26, 2021
Further to this @spotify, I have cancelled my premium account. Raising your price 20% doesn't exactly put me on the streets, but it's an exploitative rise and you don't pay artists enough. https://t.co/8F3o24iMDY
— Mike Scott (@MickPuck) April 26, 2021
It's one thing for Spotify to be on parity with its rivals with pricing, making comparing features with YouTube Music or Amazon Music or whatever the only consideration. It's another thing entirely for the price increase to put it within striking range of platforms that offer a lot more than music. Take YouTube, its music app can be said to be "Good" at best, but the value proposition of the YouTube Premium subscription is incredible. You get ad-free YouTube, downloads, YouTube Music Premium, early entry into YouTube tests, and free YouTube memberships for a selection of channels — all for £11.99. If rumors are to be believed, Spotify's new Individual plan will offer less than that for just £1 less. Spotify may have a lot of playlists built for you, but so does Google. When it comes to comparing the family plans, the value gap is even more pronounced — you get all of YouTube Premium for £14.99 between 6 people. Spotify? That'll cost you £16.99 for music alone. When we start thinking about Amazon Prime Music or Apple One, a Spotify subscription becomes hard to justify.
Spotify clearly believes it has something that these companies don't, enough to justify costing more than them. The only real question is whether consumers will believe the same. With competing services shipping in Android phones and iPhones out of the box, switching may really just become a case of inertia.
Will you be sticking to Spotify despite these price changes? Let us know in the comment below.
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