Spotify still dominant music streaming service in the US
According to the latest numbers, Apple Music remains comfortable in second place in the music streaming wars, but Amazon Music is rising up the charts.
Apple Music
Apple Music's second place spot was confirmed in early 2022, following data showing the service accounted for 15% of global music streaming in the market at the time. That same report confirmed what's also become standard: Spotify remains at the top.
The latest report from Music Business Worldwide is shedding some lights as far as subscribers in the United States are concerned, while also reconfirming which service slots where. The report cites data originally shared by the National Music Publishers Association and aims to show the number of U.S.-based subscribers as of February 2023.
Spotify sits at the top of the list, as usual, raking in a total of 44.4 million paid subscribers in the United States. Meanwhile, Apple Music has 32.6 million paid subscribers in the same region.
Amazon Music has climbed the charts quite a bit, coming in at third place with 29.3 million paid subscribers in the U.S. It's worth mentioning that unlike Spotify or Apple Music, Amazon Music is a built-in perk for another widely popular subscription service, Amazon Prime.
Meanwhile, YouTube Music trails with 8.5 million paid subscribers, and Pandora Radio has 2.4 million paying customers.
One interesting stat from the report is that when Apple Music announced that it would be raising prices for their music subscription services, they did not lose customers. In fact, they apparently added to their paying customer rosters.
Apple doesn't come out and talk about subscriber numbers that often. In fact, Eddy Cue last talked about this in 2019, when he confirmed Apple Music has 60 million paid subscribers across the globe.
Apple Music added new concert discovery features within the app in May, which includes Apple Maps integration.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
"It's worth mentioning that unlike Spotify or Apple Music, Amazon Music is a built-in perk for another widely popular subscription service, Amazon Prime."
YouTube Music comes bundled with YouTube Premium. YouTube Premium has 50 million subscribers, bringing the total to 58.5 million. Not sure why they count Amazon Music - which comes free with Amazon Prime - but not YouTube Premium.
Also, Amazon Music was not always free with Amazon Prime. For years it was a separate subscription. It was only when Amazon realized that no one was going to pay for it that they made it free. Amazing how Amazon dropped the ball on this. Back in the day, Amazon Music was the only real competitor to iTunes. That is actually how Prime Video started: just like iTunes you would pay a fee to rent or buy movies and TV shows (in addition to music) and download them. You would watch them in the Prime Video Player. When Netflix rolled out their streaming video service, Prime Video added subscription content for Prime members, then they followed Netflix by offering original content (though unlike Netflix, whose early "original" content was mostly acquisitions, Amazon actually internally produced their TV shows and movies from the beginning). But despite being an early leader in video streaming, they didn't do squat with music until Spotify came along, and even then they wasted years by trying to get people to pay for it separately. They could have dominated streaming music had they been first (or even second) instead of last.
https://www.businessinsider.com/guides/prime-music-vs-amazon-music-unlimited
https://soundiiz.com/blog/whats-best-amazon-or-youtube-music/
most people I know are on Spotify. Interestingly, my daughters prefer Apple Music, but then I am paying for a family subscription. All their friends on Spotify are on the freebie version. If that did not exist I suspect Spotify would not be doing very well.
I have Amazon Prime but do not use the included music.
I have free Spotify from one of my ISP but do not use it.
I pay for Apple Music and use it.
I pay for Idagio and use it.
I get YouTube Music as a bonus to YouTube Premium and do not use it.
So how do the analytics score someone in my situation?