Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Spotify adds subscribers, still hasn’t added high-res audio

Spotify on an iPhone.
Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

Spotify today announced its third-quarter 2023 earnings, and with it came news of an increase in subscribers year over year, as well as for the quarter. But still MIA is any sort of high-resolution audio, despite recent (and persistent) rumors.

“It was a truly stellar quarter,” CEO Daniel Ek said on the company’s earnings call, shortly after it was announced that the streaming music service reached 574 million monthly active users, up just 4% for the quarter, but 26% year over year. Premium subscribers now total 226 million, up 16% year over year and 3% for the quarter.

Spotify also managed a sharp turnaround in operating income in the third quarter, recording 32 million euros in the black versus the 247 million-euro loss the previous quarter. Spotify also weathered a price increase in July, which brought its monthly cost in line with competitors.

That’s all good news for investors. And Spotify was quick to talk up improvements for users, including the Spotify apps themselves, as well as content like books and podcasts.

Still absent, however, was any talk of the long-awaited “lossless CD-quality” streaming option Spotify announced in February 2021. There has been some chatter of late of a “Super Premium” tier that could be priced around $20 a month. But the third-quarter news came and went without any real movement.

The lack of lossless news isn’t all that surprising given that Spotify obviously hasn’t been in a hurry to roll it out. And maybe it doesn’t need to, given that it’s larger than the competitors that do have high-res options — namely Apple Music. (Apple doesn’t release subscriber numbers, but estimates put Apple Music numbers somewhere around 20% of Spotify.)

Ek did barely touch on the idea of a lossless tier in the second-quarter earnings call, further slow-rolling things. “HiFi remains something that we think has value,” he said. “But it has value to more aficionados in the streaming market. And we’re interested in, obviously, how we can use that as one tool to, in the future, increase our value even further.”

In other words, not yet. If ever.

Editors' Recommendations

Phil Nickinson
Phil spent the 2000s making newspapers with the Pensacola (Fla.) News Journal, the 2010s with Android Central and then the…
Spotify’s hi-fi lossless tier could arrive this year — as a paid upgrade
Spotify app icon on iPhone.

Spotify could finally launch its much-anticipated hi-fi tier this year, according to a report from Bloomberg. Spotify's CEO, Daniel Ek, has openly discussed the launch of a new premium tier to compete with Apple Music and Amazon Music  -- both of which have added lossless, hi-res catalogs at no extra cost -- but Ek has been coy about the timing for such a tier.

Internally, the new subscription level is being referred to as "Supremium," according to the report, and it may include expanded access to audiobooks, in addition to lossless audio versions of the company's music library. Bloomberg's reporting doesn't indicate exactly when Supremium will launch, but it says that the new service will initially only be offered to non-U.S. markets.

Read more
Spotify still growing, still losing money — and still without a hi-res option
Spotify Premium on an iPhone.

We're more than a quarter of the way through 2023. Spotify just announced its first-quarter earnings, with 515 million monthly active users. Some 210 million of them pay for Spotify Premium.

"I really can't help but feel a tremendous amount of excitement about the progress our team made this quarter," Spotify co-founder and CEO Daniel Ek said in the earnings call. "In fact, this quarter represents our strongest Q1 since we went public. The last two quarters saw the largest MAU growth in our history."

Read more
Tidal CEO says hi-res lossless is coming, raising doubts about MQA
best buy offers free tidal with select products

While participating in an Ask Me Anything (AMA) session on Reddit on April 11, Tidal CEO Jesse Dorogusker, said that the music streaming service would soon add the option to listen to hi-res lossless audio in the FLAC format. The new format will be exclusive to the service's HiFi Plus subscriber base. Dorogusker did not provide specific timing for the change.

"Breaking news for my reddit peeps:" Dorogusker wrote during the session, "we will be introducing hi-res FLAC for our HiFi Plus subscribers soon. It's lossless and an open standard. It's a big file, but we'll give you controls to dial this up and down based on what's going on."

Read more