Imagine your playlists behaving less like a shuffled stack of vinyl and more like a carefully sequenced DJ set — songs that nudge into each other, keys and beats that meet halfway, and the occasional super-smooth crossfade that keeps a party moving without someone fumbling the aux cable. That’s the idea behind Mix, Spotify’s freshly announced playlist-mixing tool, which the company is currently testing in beta for “eligible Premium users.”
At its core, Mix lets you stop playlists from just stopping and starting. You can open any playlist you created and tap a Mix button in the toolbar to either let Spotify automatically blend transitions (an “Auto” mode) or roll up your sleeves and tweak things yourself. The manual controls expose the kinds of knobs you’d expect on a small DJ console: transition presets (think “Fade” or “Rise”), volume envelopes, EQ and effect curves, and visual guides like waveforms and beat maps so you can pick exact transition points. When you’re finished, hit Save — or flip the Mix toggle off to hear the unmixed original.
That description makes Mix sound like a toy for bedroom DJs, but Spotify’s design seems aimed at a wider audience. Casual listeners can use Auto to remove jarring gaps between songs; party hosts and fitness instructors can create smoother, more energetic flows; and curious hobbyists get a sandbox for learning simple mixing techniques before graduating to proper DAWs like Logic Pro or Reaper. In short: you don’t need to be a pro to make a playlist feel more intentional.
Spotify’s timing isn’t accidental. Apple Music rolled out its AutoMix tool earlier this year, and Mix reads as a direct — and, in places, deeper — response. While Apple’s approach prioritizes fully automatic transitions, Spotify is leaning into customization: presets plus manual controls that show BPM, key info and waveforms so users can fine-tune transitions themselves. That extra control is what will likely interest people who want a little more than “press play and forget.”
Right now, Mix is in beta and rolling out only to “eligible Premium users,” which means not everyone will see the button even after updating their app. Spotify’s newsroom post and reporters note the staggered rollout; early adopters are spotting it, but others — including some Premium users who updated recently — report it hasn’t arrived yet. Expect a slow, regional-by-region expansion rather than an instant global flip.
There’s also a licensing wrinkle worth noting. While Mix makes it easy to create DJ-like sets for personal listening and collaborative playlists among Premium subscribers, using streamed mixes in public or commercial DJ contexts could bump up against licensing rules. Spotify’s streaming licenses don’t automatically grant the same public-performance rights that DJs usually obtain through other channels, so you won’t suddenly replace your club’s DJ rig with a phone app without checking the legal side.
Social features and collaboration
One neat detail: Spotify says Premium users can collaborate on mixed playlists. That means multiple people can edit transition points and effects in a shared playlist — a small but meaningful expansion of the collaborative playlist concept. It turns a playlist into a joint creative object rather than a static list of songs.
Why Spotify is doing this
At a basic level, Mix is about differentiation and engagement. Playlists are Spotify’s bread and butter — billions of them exist — and giving listeners tools to make playlists feel more immersive helps Premium feel more valuable. The feature also fits a broader industry race: streaming services are quietly adding “value add” audio features (AI-assisted playlists, spatial audio, DJ modes) to keep listeners hooked and subscribing. Mix is both a product improvement and a positioning move against rivals like Apple Music.
Hands-on tips (if you get access)
- Try Auto first to see how Spotify’s algorithm blends your tracks; it’s often a fast, pleasant improvement.
- Use the waveform and beat data to line up stems when transitioning across genres — a small delay or EQ sweep can hide a jarring tempo change.
- Save different mixes for different contexts (party vs workout) and toggle between them quickly with the Mix switch.

So, when can you use it?
There’s no definitive public calendar for Mix’s full release yet. If you’re a Premium user, keep your app updated and check the toolbar on playlists you own — that’s where the Mix button will appear when it hits your account. If you’re not seeing it yet, you’re in good company; reports from multiple markets suggest Spotify is rolling it out carefully.
Mix feels like a small revolution for how ordinary listeners shape their soundtracks. It’s not replacing professional DJ software — it’s not trying to — but by putting approachable mixing tools into the hands of casual users, Spotify is betting people will care not just what they listen to, but how one song meets the next. If you like your playlists to feel like a journey instead of a playlist, Mix might be the nudge your queue needed.
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