July 6, 2026

Key Takeaway: Spotify vs Apple Music comes down to price, sound quality, features, and ecosystem. Both now stream lossless audio at no extra cost. Apple Music is cheaper ($10.99 vs $12.99), offers Hi-Res Lossless and Spatial Audio, and pays artists better. Spotify wins on music discovery, social features, podcasts, and its free tier. For most Apple device owners, Apple Music is the better value in 2026.
Spotify still dominates the market with 751 million monthly active users and 290 million paid subscribers as of late 2025. Apple Music does not publish regular numbers, but its paid base was estimated at around 93 million and it remains the default choice across the Apple ecosystem.
All that aside, which features matter, what is the experience like using each platform, and most importantly, what do you get for your money?
Before we get into the details, here is a quick side-by-side look at how the two platforms compare on the features that matter most.
| Feature | Spotify | Apple Music |
|---|---|---|
| Catalog Size | 100M+ tracks | 100M+ tracks |
| Free Tier | Yes (ad-supported) | No (trial only) |
| Individual Price | $12.99/mo | $10.99/mo |
| Max Audio Quality | Lossless up to 24-bit/44.1 kHz FLAC | Hi-Res Lossless up to 24-bit/192 kHz ALAC |
| Spatial Audio | No | Yes, Dolby Atmos |
| Offline Listening | Yes (Premium) | Yes |
| Podcasts | Built-in | Apple Podcasts (separate app) |
| Audiobooks | 15 hours/month included (Premium) | Separate purchases via Apple Books |
| Social Features | Strong | Basic |
| Cross-Platform | All major platforms + web | Apple devices, Android, Windows, web |
| Live Radio | Algorithmic stations | Apple Music 1 with real DJs |
Both services have more in common than you might think. The real differences come down to price, audio quality, ecosystem fit, music discovery, and how much you value social sharing. Let's break each one down.
Cost matters, especially when you are paying every month. Spotify raised its US prices again in early 2026 (the third hike in four years), while Apple Music has held steady since 2022. Here is how every plan compares right now:
| Plan | Spotify | Apple Music |
|---|---|---|
| Free | Yes (with ads) | No |
| Individual | $12.99/mo | $10.99/mo |
| Student | $6.99/mo (includes Hulu with ads) | $5.99/mo (includes Apple TV+) |
| Duo | $18.99/mo (2 users) | N/A |
| Family (up to 6) | $21.99/mo | $16.99/mo |
| Annual | N/A | $109/yr (~$9.08/mo, Individual only) |
Apple Music wins on raw pricing across the board. The Individual plan is $2 cheaper per month, the Family plan is $5 cheaper, and the annual option brings the effective monthly cost under $10. Spotify's free ad-supported tier is its big differentiator: if you do not want to pay anything, Spotify lets you keep listening with ads and some limitations, and it has loosened those free-tier restrictions over the past year.
Spotify Premium does pack more into the price: podcasts and 15 hours of audiobook listening per month are built in, and the Duo plan covers couples for less than two Individual subscriptions. If you will not use the extras, though, you are paying more for features you do not need.
Both services offer free trials, and it is smart to use them to test both rather than stick with whichever you sign up for first. Spotify currently offers new users up to three months of Premium Individual free, and Apple Music's standard trial is one month, with promos running up to three months (and up to six with a new Apple device purchase). Check for current offers before you sign up.
If you are invested in Apple's ecosystem, Apple One bundles Apple Music with Apple TV+, Apple Arcade, and iCloud+ (50GB) for $19.95/month. The Family bundle is $25.95/month and Premier is $37.95/month. If you already pay for two or more of those services separately, the bundle usually saves money.
Both subscriptions renew monthly and you can cancel anytime. If you cancel Spotify Premium, you revert to the free tier and keep your library, just with ads and limitations.
Sound quality used to be the easiest way to pick a winner. Since Spotify finally launched lossless streaming in late 2025, the gap has narrowed, but it has not closed.
The bottom line: for most people on most headphones, the two now sound comparable. But Apple Music goes further at the top end with Hi-Res Lossless and Spatial Audio, both included in every plan, so audiophiles still have a clear winner. Whichever you use, you can squeeze out a better listening experience by tuning Spotify's equalizer settings.
Both services give you access to more than 100 million songs, so catalog size alone will not help you decide. The real question is whether the music you care about shows up when you search for it.
Apple Music has historically been stronger with exclusive launches and early releases, thanks to close label relationships, and it includes Apple Music Classical, a dedicated classical app, at no extra cost. Spotify leads in independent and emerging artist content: you will find more niche genres, remixes, and local artists there than on most other services.
For podcasts, Spotify has a clear edge. Millions of episodes live directly in the app, including exclusives. Apple keeps podcasts in a separate app, which works fine but adds a step if you like switching between music and talk content. Spotify Premium also includes 15 hours of audiobook listening per month, which Apple does not match.
Music discovery is a big deal for a lot of music lovers. There is a lot of joy in listening to what you already love, but a bigger one in finding new artists.
Spotify leads the industry here. Every Monday, Discover Weekly delivers fresh tracks tailored to your taste, and every Friday, Release Radar drops new releases from artists you are likely to love. Daily Mixes, Blend (shared taste playlists with friends), and AI DJ (a personalized radio experience with a virtual host) round out the strongest recommendation toolkit in streaming. It is not perfect: plenty of users report the same songs recycling through their discovery playlists, and the algorithm rewards interaction. Like tracks, save albums, block artists you hate. We have a full guide on how Spotify's personalized playlists work if you want to maximize it.
Apple Music leans more on human curation, with playlists crafted by genre experts, and its algorithmic picks have improved a lot recently. New Music Mix works similarly to Discover Weekly, and the Home tab adapts to your taste over time. Apple also brings exclusive content like artist interviews and behind-the-scenes videos.
On the radio side, Apple takes a different route with Apple Music 1, a live station hosted by actual DJs with guest artists. It has the feel of traditional radio with a modern twist, and for fans of live radio it is something Spotify simply does not offer.
If discovering music outside your comfort zone is a priority, Spotify is the stronger choice. If you prefer recommendations with a human touch, Apple Music delivers.
Both apps put album art front and center and keep core navigation at the bottom of the screen, so if you transfer playlists from one to the other, you will get the hang of the new app quickly.
Spotify's dark-themed interface is straightforward and easy to navigate: Home, Search, and Library keep everything within reach. Canvas, the short looping videos on select tracks, is eye-catching but can drain data and battery. The bigger complaint is bloat: with podcasts, audiobooks, and video mixed in, some users find the app busier than it needs to be. The desktop app is fast and consistent across Windows, Mac, and Linux, and the full-featured web player works in any browser, which is great for work computers where you cannot install apps.
Apple Music goes for a clean, white layout that meshes with the rest of the ecosystem, and many find it the sleeker of the two. It also has a feature Spotify cannot touch: lyric search. Type a line from a song and Apple Music finds the track for you. Perfect for those "I can't remember the name, but it goes like..." moments. On Mac it feels native and polished; the dedicated Windows app runs well but still trails Spotify slightly in responsiveness.
On mobile, both apps are excellent. Apple Music integrates tightly with Siri, CarPlay, and Apple Watch. Spotify offers stronger playlist management and its Connect feature, which hands playback between devices seamlessly, is something Apple only partially matches through AirPlay and Handoff.
Spotify runs on nearly everything: iOS, Android, Windows, Mac, Linux, web browsers, smart TVs, PlayStation, Xbox, Amazon Echo, Google Nest, Sonos, car systems, and wearables.
Apple Music covers iOS, iPadOS, Mac, Apple Watch, Apple TV, HomePod, Android, Windows, web browsers, smart TVs, Sonos, Amazon Echo, and select car systems. The gap has narrowed a lot, but Spotify still supports more niche devices.
If you use a mix of Apple and non-Apple hardware, Spotify gives you fewer compatibility worries. If you are all-in on Apple, the deep Siri, HomePod, and Watch integration makes Apple Music the natural fit. (Picking an app for your phone specifically? See our roundup of the best free music apps for Android and iPhone.)
There are few things in life as delightful as sharing music you have found with people you love, and we have come a long way since burning a CD and handing it over.
Spotify nails the social side; it is almost a clean sweep. You can follow friends and see what they are listening to in real time, and sharing is quick: post songs, albums, or playlists straight to Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat, and TikTok, or show what you are playing on your Discord profile. Spotify Codes give every song a scannable code so a friend can play it instantly from their camera. Add in-app messaging, collaborative playlists, Blend, and the annual Spotify Wrapped phenomenon, and it is clear Spotify has invested heavily here. It shows.
Apple's approach is quieter. You can follow friends, but activity updates live in your feed without real-time refresh. Collaborative playlists arrived in iOS 17.3, complete with emoji reactions on tracks, so the old gap there has closed. Apple Music Replay gives you year-round listening stats, though it has never become the cultural moment Wrapped is. Sharing works over Messages, AirDrop, and social platforms, but it all stays low-key.
If sharing music is part of how you enjoy listening, Spotify is the clear winner.
First and most importantly: test them both. The minor details matter a lot in a product you use every day.
Choose Spotify if you:
Choose Apple Music if you:
One honest note on value: if you never touch podcasts or audiobooks, part of Spotify's higher price is paying for features you do not use. And if artist payouts matter to you, Spotify is the weaker choice; the platform has great artist tools, but smaller artists work twice as hard to see real money from it.
Generally speaking, Spotify is the accessible, feature-packed all-rounder, and with lossless finally included, its old audio-quality weakness is mostly gone. Apple Music is the better pure music service for the money. (Apple Music wins for us, though.)
Yes, and it is more common than you might think. Some listeners keep Spotify for discovery and podcasts while using Apple Music for high-quality listening at home.
Which is better: Spotify or Apple Music?
Spotify is stronger for music discovery, playlists, podcasts, and social features. Apple Music wins on price, audio quality, artist payouts, and Apple ecosystem integration.
Which has better sound quality?
Both now include lossless at no extra cost. Spotify streams lossless up to 24-bit/44.1 kHz FLAC; Apple Music goes further with Hi-Res Lossless up to 24-bit/192 kHz plus Spatial Audio with Dolby Atmos. For audiophiles, Apple Music has the edge.
Is Apple Music cheaper than Spotify?
Yes. Apple Music's Individual plan is $10.99/month against Spotify's $12.99, the Family plan is $16.99 against $21.99, and Apple's annual plan works out to about $9.08/month. Spotify counters with a completely free ad-supported tier, which Apple does not offer.
Does Apple Music pay artists more than Spotify?
Yes. On average, Apple Music pays around $0.01 per stream, while Spotify pays roughly $0.003 to $0.005 per stream.
Is there a free version of Apple Music?
No. Apple Music only offers a trial period for new subscribers. Spotify has a free ad-supported tier you can use indefinitely.
Can I transfer playlists between Spotify and Apple Music?
Yes. With Free Your Music you can move your playlists, liked songs, and albums between Spotify and Apple Music (and 40+ other services) in minutes, so you never lose your library when you switch.
Can I use Spotify and Apple Music at the same time?
Yes. Many listeners run both: Spotify's free tier for discovery and podcasts, Apple Music for lossless listening. Use Free Your Music to keep playlists synced between the two.
Thinking of switching? Don't start from scratch. With Free Your Music you can transfer all your playlists between Spotify and Apple Music in minutes and keep your library intact.