Spotify Launches New Premium Plans in India and Beyond

Spotify’s new Premium tiers promise more options, but they might also cost loyal users more than they bargained for.

Nkeiru Ezekwere
3 Min Read

Spotify is revamping how it sells music subscriptions, introducing three new paid tiers called Premium Lite, Premium Standard, and Premium Platinum, now rolling out in India, Indonesia, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and South Africa.

Before this change, listeners in countries like India could choose from the regular Premium Standard, Duo (for two people), and Family (for six people) plans. All included the essentials: ad-free listening, offline downloads, and high-quality audio. But with the new structure, Spotify is breaking those features apart and packaging them differently, depending on how much you pay.

Here is what Spotify is changing:

  • Premium Lite — ₹139/month ($1.57): ad-free music, 160kbps audio, no offline downloads.
  • Premium Standard — ₹199/month ($2.25): offline downloads, 320kbps audio.
  • Premium Platinum — ₹299/month ($3.37): adds Lossless (high-fidelity) audio, AI DJ commentary and song requests, AI-powered playlist creation, and the option to share with two more users (three total seats).

Spotify says existing subscribers will be moved automatically, but new users can only pick from the new plans; Duo and Family are no longer available to sign up for.

The Platinum plan is also the only tier that includes access to Spotify’s integrations with AI-powered DJ tools like rekordbox, Serato, and djay, allowing users to import their Spotify libraries and build their own mixes.

While the features might sound shiny, there’s a catch. In India, for instance, the new lineup actually means higher prices and fewer benefits for most people. The old ₹139 ($1.57) plan now becomes the cheaper Lite tier, with less audio quality and no downloads. The popular Family plan at ₹229 ($2.58) is being phased out, replaced by the ₹299 Platinum plan that limits account sharing to just three users.

Related: Spotify Introduces Weekly Listening Stats

Spotify’s lossless audio and AI tools aren’t brand-new; listeners in North America and Europe have had them for a while, but this marks the first time users in these five countries get access.

For years, leaks hinted that Spotify was working on a “super premium” plan featuring lossless sound, and that’s essentially what Platinum now is. Currently, users in over 50 countries can already stream songs at 24-bit/44.1 kHz FLAC quality, but this rollout makes it official for select markets, and likely a preview of what’s coming globally.

Spotify’s pricing shifts aren’t limited to Asia or Africa either. In the last two years, U.S. Premium prices have climbed twice, from $9.99 to $11.99 per month, as the company fine-tunes its revenue model amid rising licensing costs and AI investments.

So, while Spotify’s new structure gives listeners more “choice,” it also tightens the perks behind higher paywalls. The question is, are users ready to pay more for features they once got by default?

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