Imagine opening your Discover Weekly or checking your Wrapped only to find it dominated by whatever song your kid put on loop for a week. If you’ve ever had that moment, Spotify is trying to make it stop — and without asking you to force your child onto a separate app.
Starting today, Spotify is expanding a feature called managed accounts — a supervised, music-only profile for young listeners that lives inside the main Spotify app but keeps kids’ listening separate from adult accounts. The rollout brings managed accounts to Premium Family subscribers in the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia, Germany, France and the Netherlands after a pilot that began last year in a set of other markets.
Managed accounts are basically a “kid mode” you create from your Family plan, but not as a separate app: the child uses the regular Spotify app (no extra downloads required), and the parent — the Family plan manager — controls what the child can access. Key controls include:
- Explicit-content filtering (blocked by default for managed accounts, though parents can change settings).
- Blocking specific songs or artists — so that repeat offenders never make it into the child’s queue.
- Hiding videos and Canvas animations that sometimes accompany music.
- Disabling social and interactive features that are age-gated (for example, messaging other Spotify users).
- The accounts are music-only: managed accounts do not offer podcasts or audiobooks.
At the same time, kids aren’t trapped in a sterile sandbox. They can favorite songs, build playlists, and get personalized recommendations — but crucially, their listening signals don’t bleed into the adult account’s recommendation system. That means your Discover playlists, your algorithmic radio and your Wrapped stats stay yours.
Spotify already offers a separate Spotify Kids app (a handpicked, highly curated experience available in some markets). The managed-account approach is different: it keeps the child inside the normal Spotify app while letting parents apply restrictions and keep listening histories distinct. For families who want the convenience of one app and an experience closer to the main product, managed accounts are an intermediate option between full access and the standalone Kids app.
Spotify started piloting the idea in 2024 in a handful of countries (Denmark, New Zealand and Sweden) and expanded that pilot into more territories through 2025. The positive feedback seems to have convinced Spotify to widen availability to larger markets now. The product’s stated goal: give younger listeners room to discover music while stopping their habits from skewing everyone else’s recommendations.
Why parents (and playlists) should care
Two quick reasons this matters:
- Algorithm hygiene. Family accounts are convenient but messy: kids binge single tracks, obsess over a theme song, or explore novelty genres, and those behaviors can hijack the recommendation engine. Managed accounts keep those signals isolated, preserving the adult user’s music profile and recommendation quality.
- Practical parental controls without extra apps. Not every family wants or can install a separate app for their child. Managed accounts let parents set guardrails in the same app their family already uses — including the ability to hide content that may be inappropriate or distracting.
How to set one up
If you’re the Family plan manager, the flow is straightforward: go to your account page in the app or on the web, choose “Add a Member”, then select “Add a listener aged under 13 (or local market equivalent)”. You’ll set a PIN for the managed account so your child can’t change the settings, and you’ll be able to toggle explicit filters, block artists/tracks and choose whether Canvas/videos are hidden. Managed accounts are only available through the Premium Family plan (six Premium accounts for households at $19.99/month in many markets).
Managed accounts handle a lot of everyday parenting pain points, but they aren’t a perfect substitute for supervision. Because they’re music-only, parents who want control over podcasts or audiobooks will still need to manage those separately. And while Spotify says social features are age-gated, how strictly different interactive elements are enforced may vary between markets and future updates. Finally, the feature is tied to Premium Family membership — it isn’t a free option.
Spotify’s managed accounts are a tidy, pragmatic answer to a mundane but real problem: kids’ listening habits can warp a household’s shared streaming experience. By giving parents straightforward controls and separating children’s recommendations from adult accounts, Spotify is offering families an option that’s less disruptive than a standalone kids app but more protective than handing over a full adult account. For anyone who’s ever opened Discover Weekly and found a playlist that reads like “My 8-year-old’s top hits,” this will feel like a relief — and a nudge to tidy up your listening ecosystem.
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