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Spotify Doesn’t Pay for Streams — It Pays for Demand (Why Most Artists Get This Wrong)

Payusnomind

By Payusnomind · Apr 7, 2026

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Spotify Doesn’t Pay for Streams — It Pays for Demand (Why Most Artists Get This Wrong)

Spotify Doesn’t Pay for Streams — It Pays for Demand

A wise man once said: follow the money.

So let’s do that.

What Spotify Actually Sells

Spotify makes money in two ways:

  • Subscriptions

  • Advertising

But what do people actually get when they subscribe?

They get an experience.

  • Access to nearly all music

  • Cloud-based storage

  • Offline playback
  • Unlimited listening capacity

  • Recommendations and organization

  • Integration across devices

Spotify is not selling music.

Spotify is selling access powered by technology.

The music just gives that technology purpose.


Spotify & DVD Players? 

Think about a DVD player.

You don’t buy it because you plan to watch DVDs every day.

You buy it because you want access when you want it.

The company doesn’t care how often you use it.

They already got paid.

Spotify works the same way — except better:

  • No need to buy albums

  • Everything is already available

  • You pay monthly for access

And here’s the key:

Spotify doesn’t care if you stream one song or 1,000.

If you pay $10–$11/month, they win.


Where Advertising Changes Everything

Advertising flips the model.

Now Spotify does care how long you listen.

More listening = more ads = more revenue.

That’s why free users used to be pushed into:

  • Playlists

  • Albums

  • Longer listening sessions

Because:

Short sessions don’t monetize.

It works just like social media:

  • Scroll → ad

  • Scroll → ad

Spotify:

  • Listen → ad

  • Listen → ad

It’s not about the song.

It’s about:

What gets you there — and what keeps you there.


The Data Most Artists Ignore

Let’s ground this in reality:

  • 60% of Spotify users are on the free tier

  • 40% are paid subscribers

  • ARPU (Average Revenue Per User) = $4–$5/month blended

  • Premium ARPU = $10–$11/month

  • Free-tier ARPU is significantly lower (ad-supported)

Now here’s the thing:

  • 70% of Spotify revenue is paid out to rights holders

And average payout per stream?

  • Roughly $0.003 – $0.005 per stream

That’s not a revenue engine.

That’s a cost structure.


The Big Misconception: Streams = Value

Artists think:

“More streams = more value.”

Spotify sees it differently:

More streams = more expense.

Every stream triggers a royalty payment.

So streams don’t create value.

They extract value.


Discovery Mode Proves the Point

Spotify literally offers a program — Discovery Mode — where:

  • You accept 30% lower royalty rates

  • In exchange for more algorithmic exposure

Think about what that means:

Spotify is saying:

“We’ll give you more streams… if you agree to get paid less per stream.”

That only makes sense if:

Streams are a cost they’re trying to manage.

Not a value driver.


Why Spotify Is Pushing Podcasts & Audiobooks

Look at their strategy:

  • Podcasts

  • Audiobooks

  • Exclusive content

Why?

Because these:

  • Keep users engaged longer

  • Generate ad revenue

  • Don’t require the same royalty payouts

That’s margin expansion.


The Social Media Analogy That Explains Everything

Imagine a version of Instagram that costs $10/month.

Would you pay just to see:

  • Your cousin blowing smoke at a Hooka bar

  • Your friends' photos of their lunch 

  • Random posts from people that make you wonder, "Why am I seeing this?" 

Probably not.

But what if that same feed also included exclusive content from:

  • Taylor Swift 

  • Kendrick Lamar

  • Beyoncé

Now it’s different.

Because those artists drive demand.

Everything else benefits from being nearby.

That’s Spotify.


What Actually Creates Value

Here’s the truth:

Subscriptions create value. Not streams.

You are valuable to Spotify if:

  • Your presence helps convert users into subscribers

Not if:

  • You generate a lot of streams


Follow Up

If this just flipped how you see Spotify, you need to see how this impacts your marketing strategy.

👉 Use the Payusnomind Advertising Decision Tool
Find out where your music should actually be promoted — and what will generate real ROI.


---> Break

The Quiet Competition Most Artists Don’t See

All artists on Spotify are competing.

Not just for attention.

For revenue share.

Spotify pools revenue and distributes it based on stream share.

Example:

  • 1,000 streams out of 10,000 = 10%

  • 1,000 streams out of 1,000,000 = 0.1%

The pie doesn’t grow with streams.

It just gets sliced thinner.


Why Growth Alone Isn’t Enough

Here’s the hidden trap:

Even if your streams grow…

If the platform grows faster than you…

You lose share.

And since revenue is proportional:

You lose money.


The Real Threat: Value Extractors

Now imagine this:

An artist who:

  • Doesn’t drive subscriptions

  • Hacks playlists

  • Manipulates algorithms

  • Generates massive streams

They are:

Taking money out of the system… without putting value in.

That hurts:

  • Other artists

  • Spotify itself


Why Spotify Must Control Discovery

This is why Spotify tightly controls:

  • Algorithmic playlists

  • Editorial playlists

  • Recommendations

Historically:

  • Click a song → get pushed into a playlist

  • Short playlists → auto-expanded

Why?

Because:

Control of discovery = control of revenue distribution

If users controlled it:

  • They could redirect streams

  • They could shift money

Spotify can’t allow that.


The Hard Truth About Your Role

There are only two types of artists on Spotify:

1. Demand Drivers

  • Bring users to the platform

  • Convert subscribers

  • Get prioritized

2. Cost Centers

  • Generate streams

  • Increase payouts

  • Don’t bring new users

Most artists fall into category #2.


What You Should Actually Be Focused On

Not:

  • Streams

  • Playlist placements

  • Algorithm hacks

Instead:

Focus on:

  • Building demand OFF Spotify

  • Driving users INTO Spotify

  • Using Spotify as a conversion destination

Not a discovery engine.


If you’re serious about fixing this:

Step 1

Use the Payusnomind Advertising Decision Tool
Find where your audience actually converts

Step 2

Run your numbers through the
Payusnomind Streaming ROI Calculator
See if your current strategy is profitable

Step 3

Read: The Ultimate Indie Artist Guide
Full breakdown of how to build demand that actually pays


Final Take

Artists think:

“Streams = success.”

Spotify thinks:

“Subscriptions = success.”

That’s the disconnect.

And until you understand that…

You’ll always feel underpaid.

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