Spotify vs. Tidal: Which is the best music streaming service for you? (2024)

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With Spotify subscribers seemingly on the wane, what does alternative streaming platform Tidal offer and could it make more sense for you?

Spotify vs. Tidal: Which is the best music streaming service for you? (1)

If you're one many Spotify subscribers wondering about the best music streaming service alternatives, this face-off is for you.

We’re comparing Spotify to Tidal. Tidal was the first music streaming service to offer a couple of significant points of difference to Spotify: (supposedly) superior audio quality and (supposedly) higher payments to recording artists. And its artist-centric position has been championed by the likes of Neil Young. But does it make more sense than Spotify for you?

Spotify vs. Tidal: Price

If you can tolerate ads between songs and ads interrupting your app experience, then Spotify can be yours for free. Options for its ad-free paid-for service include handy discounts for students, a two-account package called ‘Duo’ (which includes a curated and evolving playlist based on listening habits) and a family membership giving up to six accounts.

While Tidal recently introduced a free subscription option called (unsurprisingly) Tidal Free, offering 160kbps streams of its entire music catalog with “limited interruptions,” the perks of the music streaming service lie elsewhere. In terms of subscriptions, there are a couple of packages that are differentiated (mostly) by sound quality: ‘HiFi’ and ‘HiFi Plus’, both of which are available as single or family subscriptions plus useful student discounts.

Spotify vs. Tidal: At a glance

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Header Cell - Column 0 SpotifyTidal
Starting pricefree$9.99 p/m
Offline mode, no ads$10.99 p/m$9.99 p/m (HiFi); $19.99 p/m (HiFi Plus)
Student price$5.99 p/m$4.99 p/m (HiFi); $9.99 p/m (HiFi Plus)
‘Duo’ household$14.99 p/m (two accounts)n/a
Family package$16.99 p/m (six accounts)$14.99 p/m (six accounts, HiFi); $29.99 (six accounts, HiFi Plus)
Annual plan$99 (via gift card)n/a
ExclusivesSpotify Studios podcastsTIDAL X concerts

Spotify vs. Tidal: Music library

Despite some reasonably high-profile artists asking for their music to be removed from its roster, Spotify continues to offer a catalogue of over 70 million titles. A couple of million of these are podcast titles (not all of them as contentious as Joe Rogan’s). Tidal, meanwhile, is claiming over 80 million titles, as well as getting on for half a million video titles.

Spotify vs. Tidal: Which is the best music streaming service for you? (2)

When you’re talking about numbers of this size, it’s obvious there’s a massive amount of overlap between the two libraries — the likes of Neil Young and Joni Mitchell notwithstanding. Unless you’ve particularly catholic tastes (I am still waiting for Ginger Thompson’s glorious Boy Watcher to show up on either service), you’ll be able to find the content you’re after on either Spotify or Tidal.

Winner: Draw

Spotify vs. Tidal: Music quality

Here’s where the most significant differences between Spotify and Tidal can be found. Spotify’s streams run at three compression rates: a frankly miserly 96kbps, 160kbps and 320kbps. If you’re paying for Spotify, rather than using the free tier, everything comes across at 320kbps.

Tidal, by way of contrast, streams at a CD-quality 1411kbps on its ‘HiFi’ tier. A top-of-the-shop ‘HiFi Plus’ subscription, meanwhile, buys access to some music mastered in Sony 360 Reality Audio and Dolby Atmos spatial audio, plus access to millions of truly high-resolution audio titles. ‘Tidal Masters’ use MQA technology to stream at a giddy 9216kbps.

Spotify has been promising a ‘HiFi’ tier of its own for quite a while now — but details (of the launch date, of the number of titles that will be available, and of exactly what ‘HiFi’ means in this context) remain sketchy in the extreme.

Winner: Tidal

Spotify vs. Tidal: Availability

Obviously both services have been working on making themselves available on as wide a variety of platforms as possible. Spotify is available on the most recent Sony and Microsoft games consoles, for example, and can be accessed on quite a few smartwatches and other connected wearables too. Its app also shows up on any number of smart TV interfaces.

Tidal can be accessed via quite a few televisions, too — it’s pretty much a fixture on the Android TV interface. It’s available on iOS too, and can be integrated into your Sonos system. And naturally enough both Spotify and Tidal support Google Chromecast and Apple AirPlay.

Spotify vs. Tidal: Which is the best music streaming service for you? (3)

Spotify’s ‘Car Thing’ (a little touchscreen device to enable safe and stable streaming while you’re driving) is a nice point of difference. Tidal has to make do with integration into Apple CarPlay. But the advantage it held for quite a while with ‘Spotify Connect‘, which allows paying customers to stream directly to systems on a common network, has lately been removed. Tidal has a very similar feature now, called - can you guess? - ‘Tidal Connect’.

Winner: Spotify

Spotify vs. Tidal: Playlists and curated content

There’s not a huge amount of difference here. Both Spotify and Tidal will present the user with personalized playlists, based on listening history and algorithmic jiggery-pokery. They’ll also both recommend artists you may not have listened to. Most of the time they’re both pretty successful, and not as predictable as you might imagine. They can trip themselves up, though — it seems unlikely I’ll ever forget the time Spotify recommended Nat King Cole to me on the basis I enjoyed listening to Patti Smith.

Spotify vs. Tidal: Which is the best music streaming service for you? (4)

Spotify’s efforts in helping you discover new music shouldn’t be understated, though. Between its ‘Discover Weekly’ feature and ‘Release Radar’ weekly playlist, you’re unlikely to be stuck for something new and interesting to listen to. It certainly has the edge over Tidal, though the latter’s ‘My Daily Discovery’ and ‘Mixes For You’ playlist are undeniably worthwhile too.

Winner: Spotify

Spotify is, to put it bluntly, all over this. You can share Spotify content on Instagram and Facebook, and create links to share playlists and the like on pretty much any messaging platform. If it can’t embed Spotify, basically, it’s not really social media.

Tidal’s desktop app lets you check artists’ social media channels directly, and if you connect your Facebook and/or Twitter accounts you can easily scroll through your favourite artist’s feed(s).

Winner: Spotify

Spotify vs. Tidal: Design

Spotify vs. Tidal: Which is the best music streaming service for you? (5)

Large images? Check. Big search bar? Check. Full suite of playback controls? Check. Legible fonts and logical navigation? Check and check again.

Really, the biggest differences here are aesthetic. In truth, Tidal has copped a lot from Spotify’s design and interface - but it’s no less usable and effective for that.

Winner: Draw

Spotify vs. Tidal: Value

Given that Spotify can be yours for free, it’s hard to suggest it’s anything other than good value. But once you start talking about paying for these streaming services, Tidal makes a very compelling case for itself. Pay the same amount as you’ll pay for Spotify and the music you have access to is far less compressed. Pay more and genuinely high-resolution audio is on the menu, as well as spatial audio mixes.

Basically, if you’re willing to spend, spend on Tidal.

Winner: Tidal

Spotify vs. Tidal: Artist remuneration

Given that one of the founding principles of Tidal is to offer a (slightly) more reasonable deal to the artists whose music it features, you won’t be staggered to learn it has the better of Spotify where this sort of thing is concerned.

Spotify doesn’t pay a set amount per stream of each individual song. Instead, it calculates a ‘stream share’ by totalling up the number of streams per month and estimates the proportion of those that were for a particular artist or song. It’s probably more easily expressed as “give most of the money to Ed and Taylor’.

If you’re a subscriber to Tidal HiFi Plus, you at least can take comfort in the knowledge that almost 10% of your subscription is shared between the artists you listen to the most. And starting this year, your most-streamed artists will be paid based on your streaming habits.

Winner: Tidal

Spotify vs. Tidal: Audio performance

First of all, let’s accept that it’s fair enough to get what you’re given if you’re using Spotify for free. 96kbps is a chronically inadequate bit-rate, and music streamed at this standard is a cheap facsimile of the real thing — but at $0.00 per month it’s nevertheless unarguable value for money.

If you’re paying, and if you’re likely to listen using a smartphone and an inexpensive pair of headphones, there’s a chance you won’t discern much difference between Spotify’s 320kbps files and Tidal’s 1411kbps equivalents — although the differences in detail levels, in particular, should be obvious to pretty much any listener.

Spotify vs. Tidal: Which is the best music streaming service for you? (6)

It’s those who are in this for musical pleasure, rather than straightforward convenience, who have the most to gain by shelling out for Tidal’s top tier, though. Using an appropriate system (whether that’s mobile with headphones or in the home with speakers), a Tidal Masters file (of which, let’s not forget, there are literally millions) compares to Spotify’s equivalent file in the same sort of way three courses at a posh restaurant compares to a service-station sandwich. You don’t need to be an audiophile, you don’t need to have spent a fortune on headphones and you don’t need golden ears. You just have to listen.

Winner: Tidal

Spotify vs. Tidal: Which is best?

Spotify broke this new ground. It did it first and, for a long time, it did it best. But those days are over. Tidal’s not the only streaming service to have adopted the Spotify model and adapted it for its own purposes — but where pure sound quality is concerned it’s one of the best streaming services around. Which is only as it should be, because it’s one of the most costly.

Tidal still lags behind Spotify where broad integration (especially games consoles) and social media smarts are concerned, and it’s debatable whether its curation and discovery algorithms are on a par. But if it’s the music that primarily concerns you, and you’re prepared to pay to listen to it, there’s only one place to put your subscription money — and that’s Tidal.

Still not convinced? Find out what our audio editor has to say about why Tidal sounds better.

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Row 0 - Cell 0 SpotifyTidal
Music Library
Music qualityRow 2 - Cell 1
AvailabilityRow 3 - Cell 2
Content
Social mediaRow 5 - Cell 2
Design
ValueRow 7 - Cell 1
RemunerationRow 8 - Cell 1
PerformanceRow 9 - Cell 1

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Spotify vs. Tidal: Which is the best music streaming service for you? (7)

Audio Editor

As a former editor of the U.K.'s Hi-Fi Choice magazine, Lee is passionate about all kinds of audio tech and has been providing sound advice to enable consumers to make informed buying decisions since he joined Which? magazine as a product tester in the 1990s. Lee covers all things audio for Tom's Guide, including headphones, wireless speakers and soundbars and loves to connect and share the mindfulness benefits that listening to music in the very best quality can bring.

With contributions from

  • samuraishogun1

    Tidal has had an ad-supported free version since November.

    Reply

  • Simon Lucas

    I know that's the case in the United States, but in 'overseas' territories (I'm based in the UK) there's no access to the free tier.

    Reply

  • Gauder

    I just downloaded two songs from each of the two streaming services as .flac with MusicFab. I have a premium account with Spotify and the standard account with Tidal.

    I noticed that the file size of the .flacs on Spotify is about 1.5 times larger than on Tidal. It is the same with the bitrate and when I open the data with the program "Spek - Acoustic spectrum analyzer" it shows me 16 bit for Tidal, but 24 bit for Spotify (factor 1.5).

    So at least if one downloads the files the quality of Spotify seems to be better.

    Spectrum for Tidal:

    Spectrum for Spotify:

    Reply

Most Popular
Spotify vs. Tidal: Which is the best music streaming service for you? (2024)

FAQs

Spotify vs. Tidal: Which is the best music streaming service for you? ›

At the end of the day, the answer depends on how much you care about the music. If you live and breathe music—and want the best audio quality possible—Tidal is the service for you, especially if you're spending $9.99 per month. However, Spotify is essentially the Netflix of streaming music.

Is Tidal actually better than Spotify? ›

Whether Tidal is “better” than Spotify depends on individual preferences. Tidal offers hi-fi and master quality sound, which may appeal to audiophiles or those who prioritize sound quality. Spotify, on the other hand, has a vast music library and is well-known for its curated playlists and discovery features.

What is the #1 music app? ›

Spotify. Spotify is a pioneer in music streaming and is arguably the best-known service. It offers several curated music discovery services, including its Discover Weekly.

Is Tidal the highest quality streaming service? ›

Tidal may not be as popular as Apple Music or Spotify, but it is the go-to streaming platform for lossless and hi-res music. It has more than 110 million tracks that you can listen to in CD-quality sound, along with 650 thousand videos and plenty of exclusive content (e.g., livestreamed concerts, podcasts).

Does tidal have everything Spotify does? ›

Tidal Music Libraries. Spotify has a catalog of 80 million tracks from around the world; Tidal one-ups that number with 90+ million songs. Although there's a ton of overlap in terms of available artists and albums, both services have their own flavor.

Does tidal actually have better sound quality? ›

Tidal utilizes FLAC to deliver more than 110 million lossless tracks (16-bit, 44.1kHz audio files) that are significantly higher quality than standard definition MP3s or the basic, compressed streams of most rivals.

What music streaming service is better than Spotify? ›

Best for high quality audio

Apple Music has a key advantage over Spotify in that you can combine the songs you already own with the Apple Music streaming catalog. Siri users also get more robust voice controls for playback.

How much is TIDAL per month? ›

All of our premium audio formats will be available on a single subscription tier for $10.99 USD a month that we're simply calling TIDAL.

Does tidal have the same music as Spotify? ›

Again, both Spotify and TIDAL do a great job at music discovery. However, I think Spotify does it a bit better. The main reason is that it offers a lot more playlists for more or less every genre out there. Even though TIDAL is very hip-hop-heavy, it has fewer hip-hop playlists than Spotify.

Who owns tidal now? ›

Tidal is now majority-owned by Block, Inc., an American payment processing company that is owned by Jack Dorsey and Jim McKelvey. With distribution agreements with all three major record labels and many independent labels, Tidal claims to provide access to more than 80 million tracks and 350,000 music videos.

Is Tidal worth it? ›

But hey, you get what you pay for, and Tidal is worth the splurge if you're a true music lover. Tidal's exclusive content isn't always entirely unique, and some of it can be found on other platforms, but it's still a great perk for subscribers.

Why Spotify is the best? ›

There is no such thing as a perfect streaming service, but Spotify comes closer than most by offering a large catalog of music and a myriad of ways to interact with it. For $11 a month it includes a bunch of fun features, including Wrapped and podcasts, and is more than enough for the needs of most people.

What is the deal with tidal? ›

TIDAL is a global music streaming platform bringing fans closer to artists through unique experiences and the highest sound quality.

Is Tidal better over Bluetooth? ›

And then there's quality. Tidal Connect lets you stream losslessly in 24-bit hi-res, whereas Bluetooth and AirPlay do not. AirPlay taps out at lossless 16-bit CD-quality, whereas Bluetooth transmission isn't lossless at all. In terms of ease of use, though, Tidal Connect works a lot like Bluetooth and AirPlay.

Does Tidal really pay artists more than Spotify? ›

Spotify has the largest subscriber base but the lowest music quality; it is the easiest to use and pays the least. Tidal has a much smaller subscriber base but high-resolution files are available, and it pays four times as much.

Is Tidal more ethical than Spotify? ›

Tidal remains our go-to service if you want to hear extra detail on your albums and fancy a more ethical approach to payments. Not that anyone is going to get rich by uploading a few tracks: apparently Tidal pays $0.01 per stream, while Spotify pays $0.009 to $0.005 – so hey, maybe buy some merch or a physical LP, too.

How many people use Tidal compared to Spotify? ›

Tidal and Spotify Comparison Table
Military planHiFi $5.99 / HiFi Plus $11.99 per month (US only)/
Free trial period30 days3 months
Availblility60+ countries180 + countires & regions
Number of usersover 5 million subscribersover 574 million subscribers
Music libraryover 100 millionover 100 million
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