Spotify Is Raising Prices For Lots of Its Plans (theverge.com) 59
Spotify is increasing the price of many of its subscriptions this week across the UK and parts of Europe, with the US seeing a hike to Family plans. The Verge reports: Subscribers have started to receive emails informing them of the changes, and they will affect Student, Duo, and Family plans across parts of Europe and the UK, and Family subscriptions in the US from April 30th. Single Spotify Premium subscriptions are unaffected. Spotify family is increasing from $14.99 to $15.99 per month in the US. Fortunately, Duo, Premium, and Student pricing will remain the same... for now. The bigger hits to pricing will affect users in the UK and Europe.
In the UK, Spotify Student is increasing from 4.99 to 5.99 pounds per month, with a Duo subscription (for two people) moving from 12.99 to 13.99 pounds a month. Family users will also be hit with price increases, with the Spotify Family plan (up to six accounts) jumping from 14.99 to 16.99 pounds a month. Similar price increases will affect Spotify users in some European countries, too. Ireland and a handful of other European countries will see both Student and Duo increasing by a euro each per month, to 5.99 and 12.99 euros per month respectively. The Family plan in Europe is also increasing from 14.99 to 17.99 euros per month. Some countries in Asia and South America will also see similar price increases.
All existing Spotify subscribers in the US, Europe, and UK users of Spotify will have a one-month grace period before prices are automatically increased, so existing subscribers will see an increase during the June period of billing.
In the UK, Spotify Student is increasing from 4.99 to 5.99 pounds per month, with a Duo subscription (for two people) moving from 12.99 to 13.99 pounds a month. Family users will also be hit with price increases, with the Spotify Family plan (up to six accounts) jumping from 14.99 to 16.99 pounds a month. Similar price increases will affect Spotify users in some European countries, too. Ireland and a handful of other European countries will see both Student and Duo increasing by a euro each per month, to 5.99 and 12.99 euros per month respectively. The Family plan in Europe is also increasing from 14.99 to 17.99 euros per month. Some countries in Asia and South America will also see similar price increases.
All existing Spotify subscribers in the US, Europe, and UK users of Spotify will have a one-month grace period before prices are automatically increased, so existing subscribers will see an increase during the June period of billing.
Are they paying the artists more? (Score:2)
Let me guess...
[Crickets] (Score:2)
[Tumbleweed blows past...]
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Music streaming services should have been created by musicians, with all the profits going directly to the people who actually created the music. But the "artists" couldn't be bothered with that. That's too much like work, and work is for the common people, not artists.
Piss off.
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What an impressively infantile view of the world.
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No, see, as economics of scale increase, costs go up! /s
As much as I dislike Spotify, monetary inflation is sufficient to explain price increases so there's no need to invoke their #getwokegobroke strategy for an explanation. Or a sudden compassion for artists.
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Let me guess...
Considering they posted a $580million net *LOSS* last year and gave guidance for a $78million net *LOSS* for the first quarter of this year, where do you think they are going to get the money to pay artists more? Rob a bank? Start a printing press? Sell cocaine on the black market? Maybe send hitman to kill some of the artists so they can redistribute the wealth?
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Let me guess...
Considering they posted a $580million net *LOSS* last year and gave guidance for a $78million net *LOSS* for the first quarter of this year, where do you think they are going to get the money to pay artists more? Rob a bank? Start a printing press? Sell cocaine on the black market? Maybe send hitman to kill some of the artists so they can redistribute the wealth?
Paying your suppliers is a basic requirement of running a business. If they can't do that then they should be shut down for dealing in stolen goods/fraud/piracy or whatever you think you would be charged with if you did the same thing.
"Oh, but we're entrepreneurs; you can't treat us like you treat ordinary people! "
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And they are paying their suppliers. They are paying their suppliers their agreed upon and contractually obligated requirements. Can you show where Spotify is in breach of contract because I sure can't.
So why do you feel the need to get involved oh random internet peanut gallery man?
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So you're saying they are NOT going to adopt the practices of the major labels?
Why the difference in regions? (Score:2)
Why is a Family one £17 in the UK and only $16 in the US? It's just a digital service.
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Spotify pays Value Added Tax in UK...
oh wait...
Same reason Netflix, Amazon, App Store etc ... (Score:3)
... have differing prices around the world.
Because they can.
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Re: Why the difference in regions? (Score:2)
O_o
Pretty sure raising prices is a change of contract and requires the customer's consent. As in: "You're free to go if you don't like it." As in: there's your possibility to quit. It's not like your access to Spotify is an inelastic good you can't live without.
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different taxes, different currency values, different laws that you have to spend money following
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Because the markets in different regions will bear different pricing.
What's the matter? Anti-capitalism?
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Two likely explanations - taxes and price discrimination.
My guess would be taxes. Remember companies don't really pay taxes they either pass the costs of those taxes along into the product price, reduce dividends to the owners, or the business fails the government having removed an otherwise potentially viable product from the market place. Its probably more expensive due to taxation to operate in the UK.
The other possibility is price discrimination. You segment you clients in various ways (brand it Lincol
Re: Why the difference in regions? (Score:2)
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However, in this particular case, spotify is probably passing on the higher VAT tax to UK customers.
Arsenal (Score:1)
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Why does virtually nobody oppose all of this madness?
At this point, it's mostly just out of spite towards this copy+paste.
Do you mean spotify the music streaming service? (Score:2)
Streaming Services Entering the Cable Realm (Score:4, Insightful)
10-15 years ago when people rebelled against the crap that was cable, the rallying cry was, "make it easy for me to watch and listen to what I want at a reasonable price and I’ll have no desire to pirate." And along comes Netflix and Spotify and the desire to pirate pretty much evaporates. But prices have been creeping up and content has become fragmented. We’re basically at the point where things are as complicated and expensive as cable TV and buying CDs was.
I’m almost at the threshold of going back to pirating.
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I'll admit the video market is still very fragmented, and still too expensive, but I think Spotify and other music services are doing a pretty good job creating a one stop location for a very acceptable price. $16 a month for a family plan is actually an amazing deal. Less than the cost of a couple CDs a month for just about all the music out there. There are some artists who decide to be exclusive to one platform or the other, but they are in the minority, and I think that artists like this are on the wron
Re: Streaming Services Entering the Cable Realm (Score:2)
That might be reasonable if the songs weren't being delivered over the Internet. The cost of a CD goes into the design, manufacturing, marketing, and distribution of the CD. What's left is like $1-2 for lawyers and artists. And at the end of the month, you don't own anything like you do with a CD. Not to mention CDs are higher quality than the streams on Spotify.
Add that all together and I'd say $16/month is a raw deal to most people.
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10-15 years ago when people rebelled against the crap that was cable, the rallying cry was, "make it easy for me to watch and listen to what I want at a reasonable price and I’ll have no desire to pirate." And along comes Netflix and Spotify and the desire to pirate pretty much evaporates. But prices have been creeping up and content has become fragmented. We’re basically at the point where things are as complicated and expensive as cable TV and buying CDs was.
I’m almost at the threshold of going back to pirating.
A big difference is most of the streaming services don't have commercials on top of the monthly fee. Cable had this plus also pay for cable service and pay for extra channels. I think overall we are still ahead.
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While it may seem like it, the cable realm was raising prices amidst large profits with major cable owners counted among the 1% of the world's wealthy.
On the flip side a quadruple amputee can count on his non-existent fingers and toes the number of years Spotify has made a profit. They must be so evil losing $580million last year and daring to raise prices. How could they!
Also content in Spotify has not become fragmented. In fact in the music streaming world content is hardly fragmented at all with basicall
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things are as complicated and expensive as [...] buying CDs was
Is this is a serious statement? How many CDs did you use to buy a month? 0.5?
100% decrease in Spotify plans (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re: 100% decrease in Spotify plans (Score:2)
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Found the iPhone user who thought buying a device without an SD card slot was a good idea.
Or Kodi, or Jellyfin (Score:3)
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That is an excellent idea, if all you ever listen to are seven metal albums from the 80's, over and over. But then one wonders, what were you doing on Spotify in the first place?
For those of us who likes to listen to new music, Spotify is still excellent value for our money. My spending on music is probably around 30-40% of what I paid before Spotify, and I get more music too.
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Why bother? I pay $16 a month for Spotify family service, 6 accounts. That is the cost roughly one cd. With this I have access to millions of songs and thousands of artist. Including artist I would never have heard about if it wasn't for Spotify. Spotify has changed my musical tastes so much over the years that I don't even listen to mainstream crap any more.
So why do I want to set up a server in my home and dedicate gigabytes of storage space for it? Then after that, I have to constantly search o
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I have VLC on my phone - any way to get it streaming to a music collection held online? I assume your suggestion for VLC over SSH is desktop but my desktop already has all my music locally so I don't need to be able to stream it, but being able to do it on my phone easily would be nice.
Re: 100% decrease in Spotify plans (Score:2)
Re: £ not pounds (Score:2)
"from 4.99 to 5.99 pounds per month"
That's short for "9.98 to 11.98 kg" you insensitive clod! There's no £ sign there.
Gotta go now, 2004 callled. The've misplaced a meme apparently.
Damnit NO!. (Score:3)
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In the next 10 years it's 120$... think of what you could buy with 120$
$1/month? Fine. (Score:2)
I have multiple Spotify users in my household, so we have the Family Plan. We have to pay $1 more per month? That's just fine. Still a better deal than buying CDs anymore-- especially since we're in range of WiFi so frequently.
Not a huge hike ... but... heck.. (Score:2)
... buy some music every so often, yeah?
Spotify is useful - no denying it - they hooked me in good 'n proper, but I still try to make at least one music purchase a month.
Best to seek out the artists as directly as you can, say through bandcamp or something, or direct from artists site.
We run the risk of music of high quality becoming rarer, because artists won't be able to afford to do music full time.
With the current pandemic and no live music, artists are struggling big time.
For the price of a few coffee'
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Spotify is still a hell of a deal. Having some playlists automatically download on my phone despite being added from home/work is great for my weekly drive through zero cell reception. Since I have music on constantly, I have to rate this as some of the cheapest media consumption per m
Death by a thousand clicks (Score:3)
I don't know, almost $200 a year seems like a lot to me to stream music.
But that's just me, I'm sure there are a lot of people who get a lot of use out of it and feel it's a reasonable cost.
It's when you start adding up all of these "relatively minor" subscriptions that you turn around and realize that you're spend quite a bit of money on a yearly basis, but you don't notice it because it's all done by bit by bit in small charges.
I mean, $15 isn't a lot, even $200/year isn't so bad, but get 4 or 5 or 6 of these monthly wallet-sucking charges going and it adds up.
But if you feel you're getting your money's worth, then have at it.
I found a solution for myself... (Score:1)
They increased Family price for us to €19 (+2€) in February. I'm going to stay without Premium for the whole of May to get to the same price level annually. I'll be forcing myself to Youtube Music during that month, which comes with Youtube Premium that I already have anyway. Will see if I even come back in June. Good job, greedy Spotify.
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