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

Are you a Spotify Premium subscriber? Get ready to pay $12.99 per month from February

Strong earnings couldn't stop another subscription hike as the streaming giant braces for slower growth. Premium users will pay $12.99 from February 2026.

Add as a preferred source on Google
spotify-shuffle-fewer-repeats-update
Spotify

Spotify Premium is about to get more expensive from next month. As mentioned in an official press release, the music streaming platform will increase its subscription price from $11.99 per month to $12.99 per month.

The new subscription rate will be applicable from February 2026 in the United States, Estonia, and Latvia. Premium subscribers in the regions “will receive an email explaining what this update means,” over the next month.

Recommended Videos

As always, the price increase is to “continue offering the best possible experience and benefit artists.”

This is the second increase in a year

The revision comes after the streaming platform outperformed the Wall Street expectations for the third quarter in 2025 (between July and September).

The company reported earnings per share of €3.28, higher than the expected €1.97. Further, the total revenue stood at €4.27 billion (0.03 billion higher than the analysts’ prediction). Premium revenue also grew 9% in the quarter (via CNBC).

However, despite doing well in the last quarter, the company issued weak guidance for the fourth quarter, i.e., from October to December 2025. The company expected less revenue growth and/or fewer new subscribers.

Hence, the hike from $11.99 to $12.99 (about 8.3%) could be to stabilize overall revenue in the region amid weakening growth and fewer subscriber additions. However, now the service is $2 more expensive (on a monthly basis) than Apple Music and YouTube Music, two of its closest rivals.

Before this, the company increased the subscription price from $10.99 to $11.99 in June 2025 (seven months ago), roughly two years after the price was revised to $10.99. Hence, this is the second price hike within a year. In the company’s native market, the individual Premium plan costs €11.99 (revised in August 2025).

Even though Spotify delivered strong financial results in the third quarter of 2025, repeated price hikes could annoy subscribers and test their loyalty to the platform.

Whether higher per-user revenue can compensate for moderate subscriber growth, whether it helps sustain market leadership is something we’ll find out in the future.

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
DJI Osmo Pocket 4 takes aim at low-light video and fast action
The new model combines a 1-inch sensor, 4K slow motion, and updated controls in a compact body
Camera, Electronics, Video Camera

DJI has unveiled the Osmo Pocket 4 with a familiar goal, better video from a camera small enough to carry anywhere. The standout upgrade is a 1-inch CMOS sensor, which should help it hold onto more detail in dim scenes while also giving fast-moving footage a cleaner look.

DJI also says the Osmo Pocket 4 can shoot 4K video at up to 240fps, while adding 14 stops of dynamic range and 10-bit D-Log support. That gives solo shooters a stronger mix of slow motion, highlight control, and grading headroom without moving up to a much larger setup.

Read more
Amazon reveals slimmest Fire TV Stick HD that no longer needs a wall adapter
Amazon made its best budget streaming stick even better at $35.
amazon-fire-tv-stick-hd

Amazon just refreshed one of its most popular streaming devices. The new Fire TV Stick HD is officially here, and it is the slimmest Fire TV device Amazon has ever made. At $34.99, it is available for preorder right now and ships April 29.

What's new with the Fire TV Stick HD and how is it different?

Read more
These camera-equipped earbuds offer a wild glimpse at the future of AirPods
These experimental earbuds show how AirPods could get a lot smarter
A team of researchers at Washington University built VueBuds TWS with a built-in camera

Wireless earbuds have already become the default wearable for a lot of people. This is why this new research feels more interesting than yet another smart glasses demo. Researchers at the University of Washington have developed VueBuds, a prototype system that adds tiny cameras to off-the-shelf wireless earbuds so users can ask an AI model about whatever is in front of them.

How does this work?

Read more