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  2. Why You Should Ditch Spotify for Apple Music

3 min read

Why You Should Ditch Spotify for Apple Music

Written by

DA

Daniel

Published on

8/27/2025

Table of contents

Why You Should Ditch Spotify for Apple Music1. Dolby Atmos Support2. Karaoke Mode3. Separate Podcasts4. Native HomePod Playback5. AutoMix: A Next-Level AI-Powered DJ6. Monthly Stats7. Classical Catalog8. Lossless Quality9. Photos Integration10. Bundled with Apple One

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Why You Should Ditch Spotify for Apple Music

10 reasons why you need to switch from Spotify to Apple Music.

While Spotify shines in music discovery, Apple’s service offers a wider range of handy perks and features.
Apple popularized digital music consumption back in 2003 with the launch of its iTunes Store, selling both albums and individual tracks. But as the years went by, the industry evolved from selling to streaming, with companies like Spotify leading the charge. Apple got the message, and soon followed suit, offering its entire catalog for a fixed monthly fee—and so, Apple Music was born.
I remember the early days of Apple Music. While the app worked, the music discovery algorithm was noticeably inferior to Spotify’s, and its features were too limited. Fortunately, that's no longer the case. While Spotify still shines with its algorithm and Connect continuity feature, Apple Music has arguably become the superior streaming service. If you're primarily using Spotify, you're missing out on these 10 unique Apple Music perks.

1. Dolby Atmos Support

One notable Spotify omission is Dolby Atmos support. With spatial audio tracks on Apple Music, your favorite songs become more immersive—especially with compatible headphones. Thanks to head tracking, the soundstage adapts to your movements, mimicking the feel of a live performance.

2. Karaoke Mode

Apple Music has an exclusive Sing feature that turns your Apple device into a karaoke machine. It goes beyond just time-synced lyrics; Sing intelligently muffles the artist’s original vocals to spotlight yours. With Continuity Camera support on Apple TV, you can also appear on the big screen while you sing and insert special effects and backgrounds.

3. Separate Podcasts

Whereas Spotify and YouTube Music seem to regard music and podcasts as largely interchangeable, Apple safeguards our sanity by keeping the two (very different) audio categories separate. Music browsers on Spotify are liable to bump into distracting and annoying podcasts and audiobooks, but Apple delivers them via separate apps. This also allows it to add relevant features to the Music app without creating clutter.

4. Native HomePod Playback

Apple lets third-party developers build native HomePod extensions. Some streaming services such as YouTube Music have already adopted the API, which means users can play songs directly on the smart speaker, even when their iPhone is powered off or out of range. Apple Music subscribers can do the same. Spotify seems to be too busy complaining about Apple’s anti-competitive behavior to implement the API.

5. AutoMix: A Next-Level AI-Powered DJ

Spotify has long offered an AI-powered DJ, generating personalized song queues and relevant commentary. Apple’s take on an AI DJ is different. With iOS 26, Apple Music brings an optional AutoMix feature that takes the traditional crossfade to the next level.
AutoMix doesn’t merely blend the start and end of two songs based on a preset number of seconds. Instead, it uses AI to analyze the audio, then applies time-stretching and beat-matching effects to merge the two tracks seamlessly. It’s quite trippy, and Spotify seemingly hasn’t built an equivalent yet.

6. Monthly Stats

Spotify’s popular annual Wrapped event may feature a wider range of statistics and fun facts about your listening habits, but Apple Music’s Replay beats it in a couple of ways.
Apple Music provides monthly Replay stats, letting you check your top songs and artists on a regular basis throughout the year. You still get the classic year-end recap that sums up the entire year, too. If you’re curious about your all-time top songs, you can also check the newly released Replay All Time playlist, which compiles the 100 songs you’ve played most often since you first subscribed to Apple Music.

7. Classical Catalog

In 2021, Apple acquired the classical music streaming service Primephonic and promptly shut it down. The firm then released a dedicated Apple Music Classical app that offers unique features unavailable in the main Music app. These include track backstories and more granular search based on historical periods, composers, orchestras, and more.
While you will likely find the same tracks on Spotify, the company doesn’t offer a dedicated app or interface with the same perks for classical music enthusiasts.

8. Lossless Quality

Similarly, Apple Music offers a significant portion of its catalog in lossless quality. While most users probably can’t tell the difference, audiophiles with compatible equipment get to listen to the tracks without audio degradation. Spotify has been rumored to be working on high-fidelity support for years, but it’ll reportedly cost subscribers even more, if and when it actually launches.

9. Photos Integration

Apple Music subscribers get to insert their favorite songs into Memories created in the Photos app. For those unfamiliar with this popular feature, it lets you create attractive slideshows of photos (and other media) tied to a specific event, place, time period, or set of people. To make the clip more personal, you can select background audio from the millions of songs available on Apple Music.

10. Bundled with Apple One

Lastly, Apple Music is included with all Apple One bundle tiers. So, no matter which plan you’re on, you get access to Apple Music at no additional charge.
This is a big advantage for those heavily embedded in Apple’s product ecosystem, as it offers access to all of the company’s main subscription services at a discounted price. Similarly, eligible students can unlock Apple Music and TV+ for a reduced cost.

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