Spotify was founded in 2006 in
Stockholm, Sweden, by
Daniel Ek, former
chief technology officer of
Stardoll, and Martin Lorentzon, co-founder of
Tradedoubler. Ek first had the idea for Spotify around 2002 when peer-to-peer music service
Napster shut down and another illegal site
Kazaa became popular. Ek said he "realized that you can never legislate away from
piracy. Laws can definitely help, but it doesn't take away the problem. The only way to solve the problem was to create a service that was better than piracy and at the same time compensates the music industry – that gave us Spotify." Ek's initial pitch to Lorentzon was not initially related to music, but rather a way for streaming content such as video, digital films, images or music to drive advertising revenue.
Early international launches In February 2009, Spotify opened public registration for the free service tier in the United Kingdom. Spotify launched in the United States in July 2011, and offered a six-month, ad-supported trial period, during which new users could listen to an unlimited amount of music for free. In January 2012, the free trial periods began to expire, limiting users to ten hours of streaming each month and five plays per song. Using PC streaming, a similar structure to the one used today allowed the listener to play songs freely, but with ads every 4–7 songs depending on listening duration. Later that same year, in March, Spotify removed all limits on the free service tier indefinitely, including mobile devices. In April 2016, Ek and Lorentzon wrote an open letter to Swedish politicians, demanding action in three areas that they claimed hindered the company's ability to recruit top talent as Spotify grew, including access to flexible housing, better education in the programming and development fields, and stock options. Ek and Lorentzon wrote that to continue competing in a global economy, politicians needed to respond with new policies, or thousands of Spotify jobs would be moved from Sweden to the United States. In February 2017, Spotify announced the expansion of its United States operations in
Lower Manhattan, New York City, at
4 World Trade Center, adding approximately 1,000 new jobs and retaining 832 existing positions. The company's US headquarters are in New York City's
Flatiron District. On 14 November 2018, the company announced 13 new markets in the
MENA region, including the creation of a new Arabic hub and several playlists.
Other developments Streaming records In October 2015, "
Thinking Out Loud" by
Ed Sheeran became the first song to pass 500 million streams. A month later, Spotify announced that "
Lean On" by
Major Lazer and
DJ Snake featuring
MØ was its most-streamed song of all time with over 525 million streams worldwide. In April 2016,
Rihanna overtook
Justin Bieber to become the biggest artist on Spotify, with 31.3 million monthly active listeners. In May 2016, Rihanna was overtaken by
Drake with 31.85 million monthly listeners. In December 2016, Drake's just-under 36 million monthly listeners were overtaken by the
Weeknd's 36.068 million. Later that same month, Drake's song "
One Dance" became the first song to hit one billion streams on Spotify. Upon its release in August 2017, the single "
Look What You Made Me Do" by
Taylor Swift earned over eight million streams within 24 hours, breaking the record for the most single-day streams for a track. On 19 June 2018,
XXXTentacion's hit single "
Sad!" broke Swift's single-day streaming record, amassing 10.4 million streams the day after he was
fatally shot in Florida.
User growth In March 2011, Spotify announced a customer base of 1 million paying subscribers across Europe, and by September 2011, the number of paying subscribers had doubled to two million. In August 2012,
Time reported 15 million active users, four million being paying Spotify subscribers. User growth continued, reaching 20 million total active users, including five million paying customers globally and one million paying customers in the United States, in December 2012. By March 2013, the service had 24 million active users, six million being paying subscribers, which grew to 40 million users (including ten million paying) in May 2014, 60 million users (including 15 million paying) in December 2014, 75 million users (20 million paying) in June 2015, 30 million paying subscribers in March 2016, 40 million paying subscribers in September 2016, and 100 million total users in June 2016. In April 2020, Spotify reached 133 million premium users. In countries affected by the
COVID-19 pandemic, Spotify registered a fall in users in late February, but it has seen a recovery. In March 2022, Spotify had 182 million premium subscribers. At the end of Q2 2022, Spotify reported 188 million paying subscribers and 433 million total users. At the end of Q3 2024, Spotify reported 252 million subscribers and 640 million monthly active users. In February 2026, Spotify announced that it had added a record number of new users in a single quarter, adding 38 million new users in the three months to the end of December 2025 to reach 751 million monthly users.
Premium-exclusive albums The
Financial Times reported in March 2017 that, as part of its efforts to renegotiate new licensing deals with music labels, Spotify and major record labels had agreed that Spotify would restrict some newly released albums to its Premium tier, with Spotify receiving a reduction in royalty fees to do so. Select albums would be available only on the Premium tier for a period of time, before general release. The deal "may be months away from being finalized, but Spotify is said to have cleared this particular clause with major record labels". New reports in April confirmed that Spotify and
Universal Music Group had reached an agreement to allow artists part of Universal to limit their new album releases to the Premium service tier for a maximum of two weeks. Ek commented that "We know that not every album by every artist should be released the same way, and we've worked hard with UMG to develop a new, flexible release policy. Starting today, Universal artists can choose to release new albums on premium only for two weeks, offering subscribers an earlier chance to explore the complete creative work, while the singles are available across Spotify for all our listeners to enjoy". It was announced later in April that this type of agreement would be extended to
indie artists signed to the
Merlin Network agency.
Direct public offering Spotify went public on the
stock market in April 2018 using a
direct public offering rather than an
initial public offering. This approach is not intended to raise fresh capital, but to let investors get their returns.
Morgan Stanley is the company's slated advisor on the matter.
2020 hacking incident On 3 July 2020,
cybersecurity firm VPNMentor discovered a database containing 380 million individual records, including the logins and passwords of Spotify users. The database was thought to be evidence of an impending
credential stuffing cyberattack targeting Spotify as it contained the credentials of up to 350,000 compromised user accounts. In response to the attack, Spotify issued a rolling reset of passwords for affected accounts in November 2020.
Acquisitions, podcasting and exclusivity deals In May 2013, Spotify acquired music discovery app Tunigo. In March 2014, it acquired
The Echo Nest, a music intelligence company. In June 2015, Spotify announced it had acquired Seed Scientific, a data science consulting firm and
analytics company. In a comment to
TechCrunch, Spotify said that Seed Scientific's team would lead an advanced analytics unit within the company, focused on developing data services. In January 2016, it acquired social and messaging startups Cord Project and
Soundwave, followed in April 2016 by CrowdAlbum, a "startup that collects photos and videos of performances shared on social networks", and would "enhance the development of products that help artists understand, activate, and monetize their audiences". In November 2016, Spotify acquired Preact, a "cloud-based platform and service developed for companies that operate on subscription models which helps reduce churn and build up its subscriber numbers". In March 2017, Spotify acquired Sonalytic, an audio detection startup, for an undisclosed amount of money. Spotify stated that Sonalytic would be used to improve the company's personalized playlists, better match songs with compositions, and improve the company's publishing data system. Later that month, Spotify also acquired MightyTV, an app connected to television streaming services, including
Netflix and
HBO Go, that recommends content to users. Spotify intended to use MightyTV to improve its advertising efforts on the free tier of service. In April 2017, it acquired Mediachain, a
blockchain startup that had been developing a
decentralized database system for managing attribution, and other
metadata for media. This was followed in May 2017 with the acquisition of
artificial intelligence startup Niland, which uses technology to improve personalisation and recommendation features for users. In November 2017, Spotify acquired
Soundtrap, an online music studio startup. On 12 April 2018, Spotify acquired the music licensing platform Loudr. In August 2018, Spotify bought the exclusive rights to
The Joe Budden Podcast and expanded the show to a twice-weekly schedule. On 6 February 2019, Spotify acquired the podcast networks
Gimlet Media and Anchor FM Inc., with the goal of establishing themselves as a leading figure in podcasting. On 26 March 2019, Spotify announced it would acquire another podcast network,
Parcast. On 12 September 2019, Spotify acquired SoundBetter, a music production marketplace for people in the music industry to collaborate on projects, and distribute music tracks for licensing. In October 2021, SoundBetter was sold back to the founders. On 19 November 2019, Spotify announced the acquisition of the exclusive rights to
The Last Podcast on the Left. On 5 February 2020, Spotify announced its intent to acquire
Bill Simmons' sports and pop culture blog and podcast network
The Ringer for an undisclosed amount. On 19 May 2020, Spotify acquired exclusive rights to stream the popular podcast
The Joe Rogan Experience beginning in September of that year, under an agreement valued at around US$100 million (). In November 2020, Spotify announced plans to acquire
Megaphone from
The Slate Group for . In March 2021, Spotify acquired app developer Betty Labs and its live social audio app, Locker Room, On 12 May 2021.
Armchair Expert announced on
Instagram that the podcast would be available exclusively on Spotify beginning 1 July, saying they would continue to maintain the same creative control over the show after the move. Locker Room was rebranded in June 2021 as
Spotify Greenroom, and turned into a
Clubhouse competitor. The same month, Spotify acquired Podz, a podcast discovery startup. Also the same month, Spotify bought the exclusive rights to the
Call Her Daddy podcast. In November 2021, Spotify acquired audiobook company Findaway, including its publishing imprint OrangeSky Audio. In December 2021, Spotify acquired Whooshkaa, a podcast tech company that develops specialized technology that allows radio broadcasters to easily turn their existing audio content into on-demand podcast programming. In February 2022, Spotify acquired Chartable and Podsights. Both are podcast advertising companies. In 2022, Spotify Greenroom rebranded as Spotify Live, which was subsequently planned to be shut down in April 2023. In June 2022, Spotify acquired Sonantic, a synthetic voice and video developer. In July 2022, Spotify acquired
Heardle, a
Wordle-inspired music trivia game, for an undisclosed amount; Heardle was shut down in May 2023. In October 2022, Spotify acquired the
Dublin-based content moderation startup, Kinzen. In 2023, Spotify merged Anchor into its Spotify for Podcasters tool, a rebranding move and to organize its tools for creating, managing, growing, and monetizing their content in one place. In November 2024, Spotify for Podcasters was rebranded to Spotify for Creators. In November 2025, Spotify acquired music database
WhoSampled.
Company partnerships In January 2015,
Sony announced PlayStation Music, a new music service with Spotify as its exclusive partner. PlayStation Music incorporates the Spotify service into Sony's
PlayStation 3 and
PlayStation 4 gaming consoles, and
Sony Xperia mobile devices. The service launched on 30 March 2015. In March 2017, Spotify announced a partnership with the
South by Southwest (SXSW) conference for 2017, presenting specific content in special playlists through an SXSW hub in Spotify's apps. The integration also enabled Spotify within the SXSW GO app to help users discover and explore artists performing at the conference. Two more partnerships were announced in March; one with
WNYC Studios, and one with
Waze. The WNYC Studios partnership brought various podcasts from WNYC to Spotify, including
Note to Self,
On the Media and ''
Here's the Thing''. Spotify also announced that the third season of WNYC Studios'
2 Dope Queens podcast would premiere with a two-week exclusivity period on the service on 21 March 2017. The Waze partnership allows Waze app users to view directions to destinations within the Spotify app and access their Spotify playlists through the Waze app. In October 2017,
Microsoft announced that it would be ending its
Groove Music streaming service by December, with all music from users transferring to Spotify as part of a new partnership. In December, Spotify and
Tencent's music arm, Tencent Music Entertainment (TME), agreed to swap stakes and make an investment in each other's music businesses. As a result of this transaction, Spotify gained a 9% stake in TME with TME gaining a 7.5% stake in Spotify. In February 2018, Spotify integrated with the gaming-oriented voice chat service
Discord on desktop clients, allowing users to display their currently playing song as a rich presence on their profile, and invite other users with Spotify Premium to group "listening parties". In April, Spotify announced a discounted entertainment bundle with video-on-demand provider
Hulu, which included discounted rates for university students. In May 2020, Spotify teamed up with
ESPN and
Netflix to curate podcasts around their
Michael Jordan documentary
The Last Dance, and in September, Spotify signed a deal with
Chernin Entertainment to produce movies and TV shows. In 2020 and 2021, Spotify and
DC, a brand at the time under
Warner Bros. Entertainment signed deals to create audio shows on the platform around characters such as Catwoman, Wonder Woman, the Riddler, Batgirl, Superman and Lois Lane, among others. In 2022, Spotify became the official streaming partner of
FC Barcelona. In May 2022, Spotify announced a partnership with the online game platform and game creation system
Roblox, the partnership saw Spotify as the first streaming brand to have a presence within the game with the launch of "Spotify Island". In March 2023, Spotify announced a partnership with
Patreon, which Spotify claimed would "enable creators to expand their creative business through direct payments from fans, and allow fans to listen to their Patreon content on Spotify". On 6 October 2025, Spotify announced a partnership with
OpenAI to bring music and podcast recommendations inside
ChatGPT, allowing Spotify users to discover and queue new music through conversations, rather than search. Listeners will be able to link their Spotify to ChatGPT, asking it to find anything from a specific playlist to a podcast topic.
Dispute with Apple In July 2015, Spotify launched an email campaign to urge its
App Store subscribers to cancel their subscriptions and start new ones through its website, bypassing the 30% transaction fee for in-app purchases required for
iOS applications by technology company
Apple Inc. A later update to the Spotify app on iOS was rejected by Apple, prompting Spotify's general counsel Horacio Gutierrez to write a letter to Apple's then-general counsel
Bruce Sewell, stating: "This latest episode raises serious concerns under both U.S. and EU competition law. It continues a troubling pattern of behavior by Apple to exclude and diminish the competitiveness of Spotify on iOS and as a rival to
Apple Music, particularly when seen against the backdrop of Apple's previous anticompetitive conduct aimed at Spotify ... we cannot stand by as Apple uses the App Store approval process as a weapon to harm competitors." Sewell responded to the letter: "We find it troubling that you are asking for exemptions to the rules we apply to all developers and are publicly resorting to rumors and half-truths about our service." He also elaborated that "Our guidelines apply equally to all app developers, whether they are game developers, e-book sellers, video-streaming services or digital music distributors; and regardless of whether they compete against Apple. We did not alter our behavior or our rules when we introduced our own music streaming service or when Spotify became a competitor". Furthermore, he stated that "There is nothing in Apple's conduct that 'amounts to a violation of applicable antitrust laws.' Far from it. ... I would be happy to facilitate an expeditious review and approval of your app as soon as you provide us with something that is compliant with the App Store's rules". In the following months, Spotify joined several other companies in filing a letter with the
European Union's
antitrust body indirectly accusing Apple and Google of "abusing their 'privileged position' at the top of the market", by referring to "some" companies as having "transformed into 'gatekeepers' rather than 'gateways'". The complaint led to the European Union announcing that it would prepare an initiative by the end of 2017 for a possible law addressing unfair competition practices. Spotify released the first version of its
Apple Watch app in November 2018, allowing playback control of the iPhone via the watch. Users can also choose which devices to play music on via Bluetooth. In a further escalation of the dispute with Apple, on 13 March 2019, Spotify filed an antitrust complaint with the European Commission over unfair app store practices. Two days later, Apple responded, stating that the claim was misleading rhetoric and that Spotify wanted benefits of a free app without being a free app. Spotify responded with a statement calling Apple a monopolist and stated that it had only filed the complaint as Apple's actions hurt competition and consumers and clearly violated the law. It also said that Apple believed Spotify users on the app store were Apple's customers and not Spotify's. Apple responded to Spotify's claims by counter-claiming that Spotify's market reach and user base would not have been possible without the Apple App Store platform. Additionally, Apple stated that it has attempted to work with Spotify to integrate the service better with Apple's products, such as
Siri and Apple Watch. In 2019, under
iOS 13, it became possible to play Spotify music using Siri commands. Spotify was one of the first companies to support
Epic Games in its
lawsuit against Apple, which was filed after Epic also tried to bypass Apple's 30% fee for
microtransactions in
Fortnite. In September 2020, Spotify, Epic, and other companies founded
The Coalition for App Fairness, which aims for better conditions for the inclusion of apps in
app stores.
Dispute with Kakao Entertainment Corp. On 1 March 2021, Spotify confirmed that its platform would no longer have access to music from artists represented by
Kakao Entertainment. However, after talking it out and renewing the contracts between the two, Spotify later announced that it had reached an agreement with Kakao Entertainment, allowing its content to be available once again on the platform across the globe.
Functionality In November 2021, Spotify hid the "shuffle" button for albums following a request by singer
Adele, arguing that tracks in albums are supposed to be played back in the order specified by the artist to "tell a story".
NFTs In May 2022, Spotify began testing a feature that would allow select artists to promote their
NFTs via their profiles. Some artists included in this initial test phase were
Steve Aoki and
the Wombats. The testing was very limited in nature and was only available on Spotify's Android app in the US.
Artificial streams In May 2023, Spotify removed tens of thousands of songs, roughly 7% of the tracks uploaded by the Boomy, due to suspected "artificial streaming", the practice of using online bots to inflate the listening statistics.
Ghost artists In 2022, the Swedish daily
Dagens Nyheter compared Spotify streaming data against documents retrieved from the Swedish copyright collection society STIM, and found that around twenty songwriters were behind the work of more than five hundred "artists," and that thousands of their tracks were on Spotify and had been streamed millions of times. In December 2024, ''
Harper's Magazine'' released a report stating that Spotify was padding out playlists with ghost artists created by production companies in order to minimise royalty costs and increase profits. According to the report, the practice started in 2017 with a program called Perfect Fit Content (PFC).
DJ software Spotify supports integration with DJ software, allowing
DJs to
mix with music streamed from the platform. This integration was removed in July 2020 but was reintroduced in September 2025, now supporting
Serato,
Rekordbox, and
Djay. == Corporate affairs ==