After years of cheeky teasers, missed deadlines and a fandom that learned to treat every leak like a prank, Spotify has finally delivered on the promise it dangled back in 2017: lossless audio is here. The company quietly began rolling out a “Lossless” listening option to Premium subscribers this week, and for once, the rumor turned out to be true. The catch: it’s not the full-blown hi-res surrender of the audiophile dream—but it’s real, free for Premium users and worth paying attention to if you care about sound.
The idea of a Spotify HiFi product has been floating around for most of the last decade. Early whispers go back to 2017; the company formally teased a “HiFi” tier at its Stream On event in February 2021 and told listeners it would arrive “later this year,” only for that launch to stall. Leaks and UI teases kept hope alive through 2024, but Spotify kept missing windows in a marketplace where rivals quietly added lossless or hi-res support. That long, stop-start history is part of why many fans greeted the latest buzz with healthy skepticism—until the company flipped the switch this month.
Spotify’s Lossless streams use FLAC and top out at 24-bit / 44.1 kHz—roughly CD quality in bit depth, but not the higher sample rates some competitors offer. The feature is being rolled out progressively to Premium subscribers across 50+ markets: Spotify says people in places such as the US, UK, Germany, Japan, Australia, Austria, Czechia, Denmark, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Portugal and Sweden are among the first to see it, with wider availability through October. Premium users should get an in-app notification when Lossless arrives for them; the setting appears in Settings → Media quality where you can toggle Lossless for Wi-Fi, cellular or both. When a track is playing in Lossless, Spotify will show an indicator in the Now Playing bar and in the Connect picker for compatible hardware.

No extra fee — for now
One of the more striking choices here is Spotify’s pricing move. Unlike the long-speculated “super premium” tier or a separate “Spotify HiFi” product, Lossless is being delivered to existing Premium members at no extra charge. That’s a clear contrast to the idea of a paid add-on and makes the feature immediately meaningful for hundreds of millions of paying listeners—assuming they have the gear to use it. Spotify still appears to be experimenting with other premium ideas behind the scenes, but this particular upgrade won’t force you to re-subscribe to something pricier.
Compatibility and the practical limits
A caveat: Lossless is only useful if your playback chain can actually reproduce or pass it. Spotify says Lossless will work on mobile, desktop and tablet and with a range of devices that support Spotify Connect—initially citing partners like Sony, Bose, Samsung and Sennheiser, with Sonos and Amazon support expected to land soon. Importantly, Bluetooth remains a practical limitation: most Bluetooth codecs and device pairings won’t carry full 24-bit/44.1kHz FLAC, so wired connections or specific USB/Proprietary links are still the safe bet for true lossless listening. Also, while Spotify promises “nearly every song” will be available in Lossless, metadata and availability will vary by track and region.
How it stacks up to the competition
This is where the nuance matters. Spotify’s 24-bit / 44.1 kHz ceiling means it offers CD-quality or better in bit depth, but it stops short of the “hi-res” sample rates offered by some rivals. Apple Music, Tidal and Qobuz, for example, support higher sample-rate streams (commonly up to 24-bit / 192 kHz) for parts of their catalogs—an area where Spotify could still play catch-up. For most listeners, the difference between 44.1 kHz and 96/192 kHz is subtle and often inaudible on mainstream earbuds or phone speakers; it’s in dedicated hi-fi systems where higher sample rates can sometimes reveal extra texture. Still, audiophiles who’ve been waiting for a no-compromise Spotify offering may see this as only a partial victory.
Why Spotify went this route
There’s some strategic sense to Spotify’s approach. Competitors like Apple and Amazon already made lossless a baseline part of their subscriptions in recent years, so offering Lossless to Premium without raising prices neutralizes one potential advantage. At the same time, capping at 44.1 kHz helps smooth rollout complexity—encoding, storage and streaming bandwidth scale up quickly as sample rates climb. Finally, by folding Lossless into the existing Premium product rather than launching a separate paid tier, Spotify avoids splitting its user base while still checking a box the market has been nagging it about for years. Observers still expect Spotify to continue experimenting with “super-Premium” features (and revenue streams aimed at superfans), but this step is clearly about shoring up its core audio offering.
What this means for you (the listener)
If you care about sound quality and you’re a Premium subscriber, this is a net win: you’ll soon be able to stream lossless tracks without paying extra. If you listen primarily on standard Bluetooth earbuds, you might not notice a difference—so don’t expect a magic upgrade just by flipping a setting. If you have a better DAC, a wired headphone, or a lossless-capable soundbar or speaker, this is a tangible step up. For artists and labels, the rollout reduces a longstanding friction point in Spotify’s product narrative; for casual listeners, it’s likely to be quietly useful rather than transformative.
The verdict — and the gap that remains
After an eight-year tease, Spotify’s Lossless is a meaningful catch-up rather than a market-redefining leap. It removes a longstanding complaint about audio quality from the platform’s list of grievances, and it does so without making fans cross a new price barrier. But with the ceiling set at 24-bit/44.1 kHz, there is room for Spotify to beef this up later—either by supporting higher sample rates or by packaging ultra-high resolutions into a premium tier for true audiophiles. For now, Spotify has closed a chapter: the “when” is finally answered. The “how good” still leaves room for debate.
Discover more from GadgetBond
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
