Spotify subscription fees to rise in the UK, US and Australia

25 July 2023, 11:54

Spotify app on a phone
App Stock. Picture: PA

Its UK subscriptions will increase by £1 each month, taking its individual plan up to £10.99 a month.

Spotify is to raise the price of its main monthly subscription plan as it became the latest streamlining business to pass increases onto customers.

The Sweden-based music streaming firm said its single-account premium plan will see its price rise in several countries including the UK for the first time since 2011, while other plans will also see increases.

Its UK subscriptions will increase by £1 each month, taking its individual plan up to £10.99 a month.

Its premium duo plan will be hiked to £14.99 and its family plan to £17.99, while its student service will remain at £5.99 a month.

Spotify has said subscribers in the US, Australia and other countries will also face similar price increases.

It comes as streaming firms come under pressure to boost their profits as many customers reduce their number of subscriptions in the face of the tighter household budgets.

The technology firm revealed plans to cut around 600 jobs and a restructuring of its podcast operation earlier this year as it sought to reduce costs.

On Tuesday, the company also hailed a “very strong” performance over the second quarter of 2023.

Spotify said its number of monthly active users grew by 27% to 551 million for the quarter compared with the same period last year, surpassing analyst expectations.

Meanwhile, total revenues grew by 11% to 3.17 billion US dollars (£2.47 billion).

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Sir Keir Starmer gesticulates as he delivers a speech at Google's London AI Campus

UK to go ‘all-in’ on AI as Starmer throws weight of Whitehall behind technology

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer gives a speech during a visit to Google's new AI Campus in Somers Town, north west London, on Wednesday November 27, 2024.

Starmer vows to make Britain ‘world-leader’ in AI to boost growth as private firms commit £14 billion to the industry

Peter Kyle answers a question while appearing on the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg show

Tech giants must obey UK’s online safety laws, says minister

Peter Kyle

UK must not let AI ‘wash over our economy’, says Science Secretary

Online safety laws must constantly adapt along with tech, says minister

Online safety laws must constantly adapt along with tech, says minister following criticism from Molly Russell's father

Peter Kyle speaks to the press outside Broadcasting House in London

UK will not pit AI safety against investment in bid for growth, says minister

Molly Russell who took her own life in November 2017 after she had been viewing material on social media

UK going ‘backwards’ on online safety, Molly Russell’s father tells Starmer

Ellen Roome with her son Jools Sweeney

Bereaved mother: Social media firms ‘awful’ in search for answers on son’s death

A remote-controlled sex toy

Remote-controlled sex toys ‘vulnerable to attack by malicious third parties’

LG AeroCatTower (Martyn Landi/PA)

The weird and wonderful gadgets of CES 2025

Sinclair C5 enthusiasts enjoy the gathering at Alexandra Palace in London

Sinclair C5 fans gather to celebrate ‘iconic’ vehicle’s 40th anniversary

A still from Kemp's AI generated video

Spandau Ballet’s Gary Kemp releases AI generated music video for new single

DragonFire laser weapon system

Britain must learn from Ukraine and use AI for warfare, MPs say

The Pinwheel Watch, a smartwatch designed for children, unveiled at the CES technology show in Las Vegas.

CES 2025: Pinwheel launches child-friendly smartwatch with built in AI chatbot

The firm said the morning data jumps had emerged as part of its broadband network analysis (PA)

Millions head online at 6am, 7am and 8am as alarms go off, data shows

A mobile phone screen

Meta ends fact-checking on Facebook and Instagram in favour of community notes