![]() ![]() The free version is good if your budget is, well zero, but we prefer uninterrupted listening. ![]() You get ads every few tracks, can only skip six songs per hour and can only shuffle songs from an album or playlist, but you do get Daily Mixes. Is there a free version or trial? Oh yes, there is a free version of Spotify and a month trial of Premium. A family plan of up to six accounts costs £16.99, and the university student plan is £5.99. How much does it cost? We use the individual plan which costs £9.99 per month, but you can also get a Duo plan for “a couple under one roof” for £13.99. There’s a greater emphasis on podcasting than rivals, but luckily no-one is forcing you to listen to Joe Rogan and we still think it’s worth the monthly fee. There’s no spatial audio support or hi-res music, but we’ll be honest: we've never had an issue with Spotify’s sound quality for casual browsing. So if you’ve been on a White Stripes binge it groups together similar bands, and every year it collates your top songs into one massive playlist. We’ve used the Premium tier for years, and love its Daily Mixes that surface music based on the artists you like. There’s even a new AI tool in beta that acts as a real-time mixer, which literally talks you through music that has been picked based on recent listening, going as far as to introduce tracks before they play and tell you what’s coming up. There’s a reason Spotify is the nation’s favourite music streamer: it has tons of music, the app is easy to navigate, it lets you download to listen offline and deploys algorithms that are great at helping you discover new artists. ![]()
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