Spotify HiFi release date, price, quality, features, rumors and song catalog
When it arrives later this year, Spotify HiFi will deliver some of your favorite songs in lossless Hi-Res Audio – similar to what Tidal offers with its Tidal HiFi service.
According to Spotify, high-quality music streaming is consistently one of the most requested new features by its users who, previously, have been limited to 320kbps. Worse, folks who don’t have Premium are only getting half of that (160kbps) which is equivalent to listening to an MP3. HiFi, on the other hand, will offer CD-quality, lossless audio at upwards of 1411kpbs – offering over four times the amount of data you currently hear when streaming a song.
The service will be available in “select markets” to start, and while Spotify hasn’t said exactly how much the service will cost just yet, it sounds like it’s going to be more than the basic Spotify Premium price of $9.99 / £9.99 / AU$11.99 per month and there’s no guarantee that every song in the entire Spotify catalog will have a HiFi version available.
That said, while details are still a bit thin about Spotify HiFi, we’ve done our best to collect all the reporting that’s out there and collate it into a single reference guide.
Spotify HiFi release date
According to a Five Things to Know About Spotify HiFi blog post, Spotify says the new service will be available later in 2021 – and it will be available as an upgrade to Premium.
“Beginning later this year, Premium subscribers in select markets will be able to upgrade their sound quality to Spotify HiFi and listen to their favorite songs the way artists intended.”
That select markets bit is worth focusing on as it means we won’t see Spotify HiFi going live in every territory at the same time. Previously, when Spotify has rolled out new features it usually starts with the US and Europe, but now that the service is available in 80 new countries it’s hard to say which will be among the first to get the new service.
The other issue you’ll run into for Spotify HiFi’s release date is that it’s unlikely that every Spotify Connect device will get the upgrade at the same time – which means some speakers like, say, the Sonos One and PS5 might get it long before your slightly older AV receiver.
The short answer is that the service will, in some capacity be available later this year, but which devices will be available at launch will remain a heated topic of conversation.
Spotify HiFi price
As of right now, there’s no set price for Spotify HiFi. The company says that it will unveil more exact details later this year so, for now, all we can do is speculate.
If we had to put money on it, we’d say that Spotify HiFi will cost between $15-$20 per month here in the US. We know for sure that it’s going to be more expensive than Spotify Premium – which already costs $9.99 per month – so between $14.99 and $19.99 feels like a safe bet.
What’s also influencing that guess is the competition: a Tidal HiFi subscription will run you $19.99 per month as does a Deezer HiFi subscription. There are a few Hi-Res Audio streaming services out there that charge a bit less (Qobuz and Amazon Music HD are only $14.99, for example) but it’s unlikely that Spotify will be able to go any lower than that.
Spotify HiFi streaming quality
So just how good will Spotify HiFi sound? It will supposedly sound, at the very least, as good as a CD does – and maybe a bit better.
According to Spotify, Spotify HiFi will stream in CD-quality lossless audio to your devices. Ideally, those devices will be connected to a network and capable of using Spotify Connect, otherwise you’ll have to pipe it over Bluetooth which will likely diminish the quality.
That’s a heck of a lot better than Spotify's current offering of 320kbps, and will likely bring the service's potential audio quality up to par with Tidal, Deezer and maybe even Apple’s Digital Masters.
Speaking of Apple Digital Masters, there’s always a chance that Spotify might also go above and beyond hi-fi with 96kHz / 24-bit audio, but we’re not holding our breath.
So what does that all mean? In a very practical sense, lossless audio formats have more details and data than their lossy counterparts. That means hearing new details in songs you’ve never heard before that otherwise might’ve been cut out when the data was compressed. It should also sound a bit wider and more immersive, though, a lot of it will depend on which headphones or speakers you use, too.
Spotify HiFi song catalog
The murkiest detail of all for Spotify HiFi is how many – and which – songs from Spotify’s more than 30 million-song catalog will be included.
The safest assumption we can make is that it won't support every song in Spotify's vast catalogue, but millions of them should be.
Among those will likely be top hits from major record labels which already distribute the files to other services, while some music from smaller labels and older legacy titles likely won’t make the cut.
We’ll keep our ears to the ground for more details on which songs will make the cut, but for now it’s probably best to keep your CD collection right where it is until new details emerge.
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