For years, audiobooks and e-books have lived in parallel worlds—one for your eyes, the other for your ears. Spotify’s new Page Match feature is an attempt to stitch those worlds together, letting you glide between reading and listening without losing your place. Think of it as a literary handoff: you read a chapter at home, scan the page with your phone, and then pick up the story in audio form while commuting. Later, you can flip the process, scanning a page to jump back into the text after listening. It’s a small innovation with big implications for how we consume stories.
How it works
- Availability: Rolling out across most English-language titles by the end of February 2026. Works on iOS and Android.
- Access: Premium and Audiobook+ subscribers can use it with their monthly listening hours. Free users can access it with audiobooks they’ve purchased individually.
- Set up: Update your Spotify app, open a supported audiobook, and tap the Page Match button.
Book → Audiobook
- Tap Scan to listen.
- Allow camera access and scan the page you’re reading.
- Spotify syncs the text to the exact audio moment, offering Play from here or Save for later.
Audiobook → Book
- Tap Scan to read.
- Scan a page in your book or e-reader.
- Spotify guides you to the right spot in the text, telling you whether to flip forward or back.
If the page doesn’t match, the app prompts you to rescan. For titles with Recaps enabled, Page Match pairs with short audio summaries to refresh your memory before diving back in.

Why it matters
Spotify isn’t just dabbling in audiobooks—it’s trying to redefine them. By partnering with Bookshop.org, Spotify now lets you buy physical books directly, creating a full-circle ecosystem: print, digital, and audio formats under one roof. This move positions Spotify as a serious competitor to Audible, Apple Books, and Kindle, but with a unique twist—Spotify already owns your listening habits. Adding books to the mix feels like a natural extension.
The reader’s experience
Imagine this scenario:
- Morning: You read a few chapters of a novel over coffee.
- Commute: You scan the page, plug in your earbuds, and continue the story in audio form.
- Evening: Back home, you scan again to jump seamlessly into the text, right where the narrator left off.
It’s frictionless, and that’s the point. Page Match is designed to adapt to your schedule, not the other way around.
Spotify’s bet is clear: books are not just about format, they’re about continuity. By removing the barrier between reading and listening, Spotify is nudging us toward a future where stories flow across mediums effortlessly. For readers, it’s a convenience upgrade. For publishers, it’s a new way to keep audiences engaged. And for Spotify, it’s another step in becoming the all-in-one hub for audio entertainment.
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