Skip to main content

Stream come true: Spotify Seeks to Eliminate Monthly Fee for Mobile Users

spotify-mainIf you’re an avid Spoitfy user, you’ve likely wondered why the service costs $10/mo on your tablet or smartphone, when you can get it for free on your computer. Well, you may soon be freed up to wonder about something else. The streaming giant has approached major music labels in hopes of driving down royalty fees so that it can offer its mobile app at the five finger-discount.

The company is currently involved in talks with Warner Music, and talks with Sony and Universal are soon to follow. Lest you mistake this for a fit of corporate altruism, however, know that the move will likely mean greater profits for Spotify which – despite being an industry leader – is essentially treading water financially. The hope is that this will allow it to expand its audience and reduce its operating costs.

Spotify currently boasts 5 million paid subscribers, and though it may seem like ceding $50 million per month is bad business, the overhead is such that the company is more focused on a different figure: 20 million. That’s the number of total users Spotify can claim, and it wants to see that number tick upwards.

In pursuit of that end, it’s trying to offer its service at the price that seems en vogue at the moment: Free. 

What do you think? Would you rather listen to a free mobile Spotify with ads, or pay a few bucks a month?

Editors' Recommendations

Adam Poltrack
Adam is an A/V News Writer for Digital Trends, and is responsible for bringing you the latest advances in A/V…
Spotify wants you to stream socially with the new custom Friends Mix playlist
Spotify app icon on iPhone.

July 30 is International Friendship Day, and Spotify is using the excuse to drop a brand new algorithmic playlist based on your friends’ listening. Available for most users (presumably if Spotify has enough data to confidently curate it), the Friends Mix uses popular listening amongst your friends on Spotify to spin up a regularly updated playlist that recommends new music similar to what you and your friends like.

This new playlist will follow a similar formula as other algorithmic offerings like the Release Radar, Discover Weekly, and Daily Mix playlists that listeners have loved for years. Now, instead of just curated music based on your listening habits, Spotify is aiming to factor in music and genres your friends love to further widen the net.

Read more
Spotify Plus might give free users unlimited track skipping for $1 per month
Screen capture of the Spotify app promoting Spotify Plus.

Spotify appears to be testing out a new paid subscription option called Spotify Plus. At just $1 per month, it's far cheaper than its $10 per month Premium plan, but as you might expect, there's a reason. Unlike the Premium plan, Spotify Plus members won't be able to avoid ads, but they will get an unlimited number of track skips. Free Spotify members are currently limited to six skips per hour.

Originally reported by The Verge, Spotify Plus members will also get the ability to directly access tracks from a given album, another feature that free users don't get. Digital Trends reached out to Spotify to confirm these details, but the streaming company wouldn't entirely commit. "We're always working to enhance the Spotify experience and we routinely conduct tests to inform our decisions," a Spotify spokesperson told us via email. "We’re currently conducting a test of an ad-supported subscription plan with a limited number of our users. Some tests end up paving the way for new offerings or enhancements while others may only provide learnings. We don’t have any additional information to share at this time."

Read more
T-Mobile’s TVision live TV streaming service starts at $10 a month, with a catch
T-Mobile TVision

Cord-cutters will soon have yet another option when it comes to ditching their cable or satellite subscriptions: T-Mobile is launching TVision, a live TV streaming service that starts at just $10 per month, with special bundles for live news, sports, entertainment, and premium channels. It launches November 1, but unlike competitors such as YouTube TV, Sling TV, or Hulu + Live TV, you must be a qualifying T-Mobile subscriber to sign up for TVision.

If you are a T-Mobile customer (or you become one), the company claims you can save up to half of your regular cable bill. "A TV package on the average cable bill costs $156 — and that’s before add-on fees," according to the TVision website. Your actual savings will depend a lot on which TVision package you choose, but there's no doubt that you can spend as little as $10 per month if your needs are minimal.

Read more