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Spotify Tests Three-Tier Premium Push In UAE And Saudi Arabia

The pilot gauges whether Gulf listeners will pay more for higher-fidelity audio, AI, and third-party DJ integration and bundled audiobooks.

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Spotify has rolled out a three-tier subscription mix in the UAE and Saudi Arabia, adding Premium Lite, Premium Standard, and a new Platinum tier. It is one of the streaming company’s most granular pricing tests in the region and lands as paid use across the Gulf edges upward.

The same pilot is also moving into South Africa, Indonesia, and India, giving Spotify a broader read on what listeners value most — sound quality, extra content, or simply ad-free access. The UAE and Saudi markets, both young and mobile-heavy, are expected to offer early signals.

Premium Lite keeps things basic: ad-free listening without heavier features. Premium Standard covers everyday use and retains offline playback. Platinum is the biggest change: It introduces Lossless Audio, AI DJ, AI-built playlists, and hooks for third-party DJ tools, alongside existing options such as Jam and Daylist.

Platinum users also get audiobook access. The tier includes 12 hours for plan managers with optional 10-hour top-ups. At launch, the catalogue opens with more than 150,000 English-language titles, and tools like automatic bookmarking and a Sleep Timer are folded in.

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Spotify says the test reflects shifts in listening behavior rather than a cosmetic refresh. “We know that the way people connect with audio is deeply personal,” said Akshat Harbola, Managing Director for MENAP at Spotify. The pilot, he said, is built around “more choice, flexibility, and value” as the platform probes demand for higher-fidelity sound.

The Middle East has become a useful proving ground for premium digital tiers, helped in part by Saudi Arabia’s cultural spending under Vision 2030 and the UAE’s appetite for mobile-first services. If the mix holds, Spotify could carry the model into more markets as competition over paid listeners tightens.

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