Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. News

Spotify will add a lossless hi-fi option later this year

Add as a preferred source on Google

During its live Spotify Stream On event today, the streaming music company announced that it will launch Spotify HiFi, a new option for its premium subscribers that will give them access to lossless, high-quality music streams, later this year.

Spotify describes the audio as “lossless CD-quality,” which is a considerable step up from the company’s current 320kbps, lossy streaming quality. It said that high-quality music streaming is consistently one of the most requested new features by its users.

Recommended Videos

Spotify has not yet revealed when the new HiFi tier will launch or what it will cost, saying only that “premium subscribers in select markets will be able to upgrade their sound quality to Spotify HiFi and listen to their favorite songs in the way artists intended.”

Several other music streaming services like Tidal and Amazon Music have offered lossless quality audio for years, with pricing that comes in around double what you’d pay for the standard service. With Spotify’s massive reach and subscriber numbers, its HiFi service could be the move that finally pushes other players like Apple Music and YouTube Music into the lossless CD-quality space — something they have so far resisted.

Stream On: The power of HiFi - Billie Eilish & Finneas

Spotify showcased the new service with a video from Billie Eilish and Finneas, in which the pair discuss the importance of having a high-quality sound system when listening to the tracks the duo have created in the studio.

“High-quality audio means more info,” Billie Eilish says in the video. “There are things you will not hear if you don’t have a good sound system.”

Letting people stream high-quality audio is one thing, but if your speakers aren’t set up to receive that improved stream, you won’t hear much of a difference. So Spotify says it’s working with “some of the world’s biggest speaker manufacturers” to make sure that Spotify HiFi works seamlessly when using Spotify Connect.

It’s worth noting that lossless, CD-quality streaming tiers like Spotify HiFi, Tidal HiFi, and Amazon Music HD are best when you listen via Wi-Fi on a high-quality wireless speaker. Bluetooth connections — even ones that use better codecs like aptX — are still considered lossy and will add some additional compression to these streams before you hear them on your wireless headphones or true wireless earbuds.

We should also point out that while lossless CD-quality is way better than typical music streams, it’s not considered hi-res audio, which is generally classified as being better-than-CD quality.

Simon Cohen
Former Contributing Editor, A/V
Simon Cohen obsesses over the latest wireless headphones, earbuds, soundbars, and all manner of related devices and…
Edifier’s new budget headphones put song lyrics on the earcups and I’m confused
The Auro Ace mixes gamer aesthetics with surprisingly decent specs
Edifier Auro Ace Featured

Most budget headphones today look painfully similar. Same safe designs, same recycled “deep bass” marketing, and the same feature checklists. That’s exactly why Edifier’s newly launched Auro Ace immediately stands out, thanks to its animated dot-matrix display built directly into the earcups and a design that clearly prioritizes personality as much as audio.

Edifier’s Auro Ace headphones put lyrics directly on the earcups

Read more
The HomePod mini still makes sense in 2026 if you are already in Apple’s ecosystem
The HomePod mini still works best if you are already deep into Apple’s ecosystem
Indoors, Interior Design, Lamp

The HomePod mini launched as Apple’s smaller and more affordable smart speaker, and on paper, not much has changed since then. The design is the same, the price has stayed consistent, and in 2026, it still looks almost identical to the version Apple introduced years ago.

However, expectations around smart speakers are very different now. Instead of focusing on specs alone, the bigger question is whether the HomePod mini still makes sense in everyday use, especially as competitors continue pushing smarter assistants, better flexibility, and stronger audio at similar prices

Read more
JBL’s new Live 4 earbuds come in three styles and a smarter case with a built-in display
These new earbuds turn the case into a tiny control center
Body Part, Finger, Hand

JBL has updated its Live earbuds lineup with three new models dubbed the Live Buds 4, Live Beam 4, and Live Flex 4. The trio covers different fits, ranging from sealed in-ear buds to a more open stem-style option.

All three models also come with a touchscreen charging case that offers personalization options and quick access to earbud controls usually found inside the JBL Headphones app.

Read more