On Thursday, Spotify began offering two new deals that should tempt free users to give the paid version a shot. Users in all markets other than Japan have until June 30th, to take advantage of these offers. While Apple Music has become the music streamer to beat in the United States, Spotify is still the undisputed king internationally. Even amidst the uncertainty of the novel coronavirus pandemic, Spotify met or exceeded all of its most important metrics, and expects to see continued growth in the second quarter. The one major area of concern for Spotify is ad-supported revenue, as advertising took a gigantic hit when the global economy came to a screeching halt earlier this year. With ad-supported revenues failing to meet expectations, Spotify appears to be tempting as many free users into signing up for Premium subscriptions as possible, hoping that many of them opt to stay on board once their free trial period runs out later this summer or fall.


The social distancing summer of is the perfect time to discover new artists and rediscover old favourites. New Spotify customers can get a free three month subscription to the music streaming app's ad-free Premium service. Premium unlocks all Spotify's features , allowing customers to stream unlimited music and build playlists from its library of millions of songs, albums, podcasts and more. The social distancing summer of may be the perfect time to discover new artists from around the world and delve into back catalogues of those you've always meant to get into. From the Beatles to Billie Eilish, if you've heard of a recording artist, they are probably on Spotify. The three month tria l is completely free, although Spotify will start charging customers once the trial period is over, unless you cancel your subscription. Spotify is available across a range of devices, including phones, computers, tablets, Smart speakers, TVs, and cars. To sign-up for a free three month trial, new Spotify users can head here before June If you've had a premium account before you will not be offered a free trial.
Sick of Spotify ads? Dying to take your carefully curated playlists with you on your commute home? Here's everything you need to know in order to get a truly free trial. Click "Try Premium. Log in with your existing Spotify Account. If you don't have a Spotify account, click "Sign Up Here" at the bottom of the sign in window, and come back after you've created an account. Select your payment method and enter your zip code. You'll be taken to a screen to fill in your Credit Card or PayPal information. Once you make your payment of zero dollars, you'll be taken to your receipt, and you're ready to start checking out Spotify Premium. If you decide you do want to pay for Premium, you can just subscribe again once your trial runs out.
This article was co-authored by our trained team of editors and researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness. The wikiHow Tech Team also followed the article's instructions and verified that they work. This article has been viewed , times. Learn more This wikiHow teaches you how to test Spotify Premium for free by using the free day trial, as well as how to cancel the Premium subscription to avoid being charged. While there is no way to use Spotify Premium for free without eventually paying for a membership, the free trial should give you enough time to determine whether or not you want to pay for Spotify. Keep in mind that in order to use the Spotify Premium free trial, you'll need a Spotify account which hasn't yet used the free Premium membership; additionally, you cannot sign up for Premium using the Spotify desktop program or the iPhone version of the Spotify app. Should you want to continue your free trial, you can always create a new Spotify account with a different email address. To learn how to get a free Premium trial on Android, read on! Did this summary help you?