Spotify is introducing a new feature for its Premium Family plan subscribers that gives parents greater oversight of what their children listen to on the platform. The update, called “Managed accounts,” is aimed at users under 13 and will begin rolling out in several major markets, including the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia, Germany, France, and the Netherlands.
The feature allows parents to customize and restrict their child’s Spotify experience with a range of new tools. Through Managed accounts, parents can filter out explicit lyrics, block specific songs, albums, or artists, and disable the short video clips that sometimes accompany music tracks. Spotify is also removing its in-app messaging function for these accounts to further minimize unsupervised interactions.
Despite the added restrictions, Spotify says children will still have agency over their listening habits. Managed accounts retain the app’s core personalization features, meaning young users can create playlists, follow artists, and receive algorithm-based recommendations tailored to their own listening behavior—independent of their parents’ activity.
The move marks a notable expansion of Spotify’s family features, positioning the platform more clearly in the parental control space alongside rivals such as Apple Music and YouTube Music, both of which have introduced child-safe modes in recent years. It also reflects the company’s effort to navigate the growing global focus on digital safety and privacy for minors, especially as streaming services face increasing scrutiny over algorithmic exposure and inappropriate content.
Spotify has not announced an exact timeline for a global rollout, but the feature is expected to reach all Premium Family regions in the coming months. For families already using Spotify Kids, Managed accounts effectively bridge the gap between the child-focused app and the main Spotify experience—giving parents a more flexible, supervised way to transition their kids into full users of the service.