Spotify has introduced two new Messages features that let users see what friends are listening to in real time and invite them into shared listening sessions, signalling a deeper shift towards in-app social interaction.

Wider Rollout By Early February

The update, confirmed by Spotify on 7 January, adds Listening Activity and Request to Jam to markets where Messages is already available, with wider rollout expected by early February.

Why Spotify Is Doubling Down On Social Features

For much of its history, Spotify has been a largely solitary experience. For example, while playlists, links, and Wrapped summaries encouraged sharing, that sharing typically happened elsewhere, via WhatsApp, Instagram, or other messaging platforms.

However, the introduction of Messages in August 2025 marked a change in direction. Spotify began experimenting with keeping conversations inside its own ecosystem, rather than acting purely as a content source for other apps.

According to Spotify’s Newsroom, that shift has already shown measurable engagement. The company says that “almost 40 million users have sent nearly 340 million messages” since Messages launched, indicating sustained use rather than novelty adoption.

Listening Activity and Request to Jam build directly on that behaviour, turning private listening into a visible signal and reducing friction between discovery, conversation, and shared playback.

Listening Activity

Listening Activity is an opt-in feature that displays what a user is currently listening to within the Messages interface. If the user is not actively playing audio, their most recently played track is shown instead.

Once enabled (via the Privacy and social settings), activity appears at the top of Messages chats and in the chat row of the side drawer. It is only visible to contacts a user has already messaged on Spotify.

Spotify has been keen to highlight the controllability of Activity sharing, pointing out that it can be turned off at any time, and users can still see other people’s listening activity even if they have not enabled their own, provided the other person has opted in.

Tapping on a friend’s listening activity opens a set of quick actions, including starting playback, saving the track, opening the context menu, or reacting with one of six emojis. The design focuses on immediacy rather than commentary, encouraging lightweight engagement rather than long conversations.

Spotify describes the feature as giving users “a real-time look at what music your friends and family are listening to”, positioning it as a social awareness rather than a performance feature.

Request To Jam And The Growth Of Shared Listening

Alongside visibility, Spotify is also making it easier to act on that awareness through Request to Jam. This is Spotify’s real-time collaborative listening feature, which allows users to share a queue of tracks and listen synchronously from different locations. Spotify says Jam usage has been accelerating, noting that daily active users have “more than doubled year over year”.

Why?

Request to Jam actually addresses one of the main barriers to remote shared listening, i.e., timing. For example, previously, users needed to coordinate externally or guess when friends were available. With Listening Activity, availability becomes visible, and Request to Jam provides a one-tap invitation.

Premium users can send a Jam request directly from a Messages chat. The recipient can accept or decline. If accepted, the recipient becomes the host, and both participants can add tracks to a shared queue.

Suggested Tracks

During a Jam, participants see each other’s display names and receive suggested tracks based on their combined listening profiles. Invitations expire if not accepted, and users can leave sessions at any time.

Spotify frames this as a way to “quickly turn those moments into shared listening sessions”, blending discovery with participation.

Subscription, Age, And Messaging Limits

Spotify says access to the new features is shaped by existing platform constraints. Listening Activity is available to all users with access to Messages, regardless of subscription tier. Request to Jam, however, can only be initiated by Premium users, though Free users can join when invited.

Both features are limited to users aged 16 and over, reflecting Messages’ existing age restriction. Messages themselves remain one-to-one only, and users can only message people they have previously shared content with, such as playlist collaborators or Jam participants.

Messages are encrypted at rest and in transit, though Spotify has confirmed they are not end-to-end encrypted, a point that may matter to privacy-conscious users.

For Spotify

From a commercial perspective, these features support several of Spotify’s core objectives. For example, keeping discovery, conversation, and shared listening inside the app increases time spent on the platform, strengthens habit formation, and reduces reliance on external social networks. Each of those factors contributes to retention, which remains critical in a highly competitive streaming market.

Also, Request to Jam essentially reinforces the value gap between Free and Premium tiers. While Free users can participate, only Premium subscribers can initiate sessions, subtly encouraging upgrades without aggressive prompts.

There is also a data dimension to all this. For example, social listening creates more context around discovery, which may improve recommendation quality over time, especially when combined listening preferences are involved.

Competitive Pressure On Other Streaming Platforms

Spotify’s move further differentiates it from rivals that focus primarily on catalogue and audio quality rather than social interaction.

Apple Music, Amazon Music, and YouTube Music all offer sharing and collaborative playlists, but none have integrated real-time listening visibility and messaging in the same way. Spotify’s approach positions social engagement as a product feature rather than a marketing add-on.

If Listening Activity and Jam continue to grow, competitors may face some pressure to respond, particularly if users begin to associate Spotify with shared experiences rather than individual consumption.

Users And Business

For everyday users, the changes lower the barrier to discovery and shared listening, particularly for people who already use Spotify socially with friends or family.

For businesses, creators, and brands, the implications are more indirect but still relevant. For example, music-led environments such as gyms, retail spaces, cafés, and studios increasingly use Spotify as part of their brand experience. Greater social visibility may influence how playlists spread organically between users.

Artists and podcasters may also benefit if listening activity encourages faster, peer-driven discovery, though Spotify has not yet provided data on how activity visibility affects streaming behaviour at scale.

Criticisms and Challenges

Despite the careful framing, the update is not without potential drawbacks. For example, some users may be uncomfortable with even limited visibility into their listening habits, particularly when content is personal or sensitive. Although Listening Activity is opt-in, social pressure can still influence participation once features become widespread.

There are also privacy questions around how listening data is surfaced, even among known contacts. While Spotify has avoided public feeds, the boundary between awareness and exposure remains subjective.

From a product perspective, Messages is still a relatively constrained system. The lack of group chats and broader discovery limits how far social interaction can scale, and some users may continue to prefer external messaging apps regardless of new features.

It remains unclear at this point how Listening Activity will affect listening behaviour itself. Although visibility can encourage sharing, it can also lead to self-censorship, where users avoid certain content because they know it may be seen.

That said, Spotify’s rollout seems to suggest a confidence that the benefits will outweigh those risks, but real-world adoption will determine whether social listening becomes a core part of the platform or remains a feature used by a smaller subset of engaged users.

What Does This Mean For Your Business?

Spotify’s decision to surface listening behaviour and make shared sessions easier reflects a broader recalibration of what a streaming platform is expected to do. For example, this is no longer just about access to a catalogue or algorithmic recommendations, but about creating moments of interaction that keep users present, engaged, and less likely to drift elsewhere. Listening Activity and Request to Jam both essentially prioritise immediacy, reducing the steps between discovery, response, and participation.

For Spotify, retention matters as much as growth, and social features that sit naturally inside everyday listening habits offer a way to deepen engagement without radically changing how the app works. The measured design choices, opt-in visibility, one-to-one messaging, and Premium-led initiation suggest an attempt to balance expansion with control rather than chasing scale at all costs.

For competitors, this could raise the bar around what shared listening looks like in practice. Collaborative playlists alone may start to feel static if real-time awareness and interaction become more normalised. Whether rivals respond with similar features or take a different approach will shape how social music streaming evolves over the next few years.

UK businesses and organisations that already rely on Spotify as part of their customer or workplace experience may also feel indirect effects. For example, shared listening habits can influence how playlists circulate organically, how music-led environments shape brand perception, and how quickly new content gains traction through peer visibility. For creators, venues, retailers, and service-led spaces, the line between listening and recommendation is becoming shorter and more socially driven.

At the same time, adoption is not guaranteed. Privacy comfort levels, differing attitudes to visibility, and the continued pull of external messaging platforms will all influence how widely these features are used. Spotify’s challenge now is less about launching new tools and more about ensuring they become part of everyday behaviour without creating friction or fatigue.

How users respond over the coming months will determine whether social listening becomes a defining layer of Spotify’s identity or remains a useful but optional enhancement for a more engaged subset of its audience.