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Spotify free users can now play any song with the new ‘Pick and Play’ feature

It could free millions of listeners from shuffle jail and make the free plan less frustrating.

Emmanuel Umahi profile image
by Emmanuel Umahi
Spotify free users can now play any song with the new ‘Pick and Play’ feature
Photo by Iggy Love / Unsplash

For as long as Spotify has existed, free users have lived in shuffle jail. You could hit play on a playlist, but if you wanted to hear a specific song? Sorry, unless you upgraded to Premium, you were stuck skipping until the algorithm blessed you. Now that’s changing.

Spotify just announced Pick & Play, a new feature that finally lets free users around the world search for and play any song they want. That means if your friend sends you a track, or you see your favourite artist drop something on Instagram, you can hit play instantly instead of hoping shuffle lands on it.

It’s part of a broader trio of upgrades Spotify is rolling out—Pick & Play, Search & Play, and Share & Play—all aimed at making the free experience feel less like a demo version and more like the real thing. But of course, there’s a catch: free users will get a daily allowance of “on-demand time.” Once that runs out, you’re back to limited skips per hour. Spotify isn’t saying exactly how much time you’ll get, but Premium users won’t face any of these restrictions.

Spotify Finally Rolls Out Lossless Streaming
It could unlock better sound quality across nearly every song available on Spotify.

Why this change matters

This isn’t just about throwing free users a bone. Spotify’s ad business has been struggling. The company wants ads to make up 20% of its revenue, but they’re stuck at around 11% as of June. And with 433 million free users (the majority of its nearly 700 million monthly actives), the math is simple: the more you engage, the more ads Spotify can show you.

Giving free users more freedom—the ability to actually search and play a song instead of bouncing to YouTube or TikTok—means more time in-app. And more time in-app means more impressions for advertisers.

But Spotify is playing catch-up here. Apple Music doesn’t really do a free tier beyond trial periods, but its users all get full on-demand access. YouTube Music lets free users pick tracks too, though they’ll have to deal with interruptions and limits like background play. Even Deezer allows more flexibility.

Spotify Adds Messaging to Keep Music Sharing In-App
Spotify is rethinking how people discover and share music, aiming to transform listening into a more social, in-app experience.

What Spotify’s doing now is a hybrid approach: giving free users a taste of Premium control, but not enough to stop upselling. It’s a careful balance—lure people back into the free app so they hear ads, while dangling the carrot of unlimited skips and no time limits if they pay.

The bigger question is whether this keeps people loyal. Because let’s be real—if I want free, unlimited access, YouTube Music is already there. If I want hi-fi and lossless, Apple Music and Tidal exist. What Spotify has going for it is culture: playlists, algorithms, Wrapped, and now, fewer reasons to quit when you’re on the free plan.

In other words, shuffle jail might not be gone completely, but Spotify just handed free users the keys to the gate.

Emmanuel Umahi profile image
by Emmanuel Umahi

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