Spotify’s latest update extends its gradual shift into video by rolling out music videos to Premium subscribers in the United States and Canada, a move that mirrors the long-established approach used by YouTube Music. The feature has been in testing across several regions since 2024, but this wider release marks Spotify’s clearest step yet toward integrating video as a core part of the service rather than an experimental add-on. As with YouTube Music, eligible tracks now display a prompt to switch from audio to video, resuming playback from the same point and allowing users to toggle back with a single tap. On mobile, rotating the device triggers a full-screen landscape player, again echoing YouTube Music’s familiar interface.
Spotify acknowledges that only a limited catalog is available during the beta rollout, featuring artists such as Ariana Grande, Olivia Dean, BABYMONSTER, Addison Rae, Tyler Childers, Natanael Cano, and Carín León. The company says the library will expand quickly, but the initial approach suggests a controlled introduction designed to test how subscribers interact with the feature before scaling it more broadly. Given YouTube Music’s long-standing criticism that mixing video and audio can disrupt listening continuity, Spotify may face similar usability challenges—especially for users who prefer a straightforward audio-first experience.
The addition fits into Spotify’s broader video experimentation, which now includes album-countdown pages, looping canvas visuals, and short promotional clips intended to help artists surface new releases. While Spotify presents these tools as ways for artists to engage listeners already interacting with their music, they also continue a trend of pulling the platform toward more video-centric discovery methods. That shift has not been universally welcomed, particularly amid ongoing debates about compensation models and how much these features actually benefit creators.
The company’s messaging underscores that the new music video option is exclusive to Premium users, with no current plans to bring it to free accounts in the U.S. or Canada. As video increasingly becomes part of the platform’s strategy, the update raises broader questions about how far Spotify intends to diverge from its audio roots—especially when its implementations closely resemble existing models rather than establishing a distinct direction.

