Spotify kicked off 2025 with a strong user surge and record operating income—but rising costs clipped the quarter’s wings. The platform posted €509 million in operating income, more than double from a year ago, but short of the €548 million forecast. Shares slid 7% pre-market.
The culprit? A surprise €76 million in employee-related social charges, driven by Spotify’s rising stock price. That overshadowed cost cuts in marketing and operations. Net profit rose 14 percent to €225 million, and total revenue grew 15 percent to €4.19 billion—just shy of analyst expectations of €4.20 billion.
Subscriber Momentum Remains Spotify’s Power Play
Premium subscribers jumped 12% to 268 million, topping expectations. Monthly active users hit 678 million, also beating forecasts. For Q2, Spotify expects 689 million MAUs and 273 million Premium subs—both ahead of the Street.
CEO Daniel Ek pointed to freemium model resilience and consistent engagement: “Short-term noise won’t distract us from the long-term trajectory.”
Ad Revenue Up YoY, But Podcast Pricing Proves Tricky
Ad revenue grew 8% YoY to €419 million—but dipped 22% from Q4, thanks to weaker pricing and optimization headaches in owned and licensed podcast inventory. Analysts flagged potential macro headwinds ahead, including global tariff uncertainty.
Video Podcasts, Audiobooks, and Creator Payouts Fuel Ecosystem Play
Spotify’s non-music bets are starting to click. The platform now hosts 330,000 video podcasts, and more than 270 million users engage with video. Watch time is up 44% YoY.
The real spark? The January launch of Spotify’s Partner Program, aimed at creators and publishers. Since then, Spotify has paid out $100M+ in ad revenue and Premium-user bonuses—leading to a 40% spike in video podcast consumption. The goal: lure creators from YouTube, Amazon, and SiriusXM.
Spotify may trail YouTube’s billion-podcast-user claim with its 170M podcast listeners, but it’s closing the gap by investing in engagement, retention, and creator-friendly incentives.
Crucially, these creator payouts didn’t dent margins—those hits came from unplanned stock-related charges, not the Partner Program.
Early Partner Program Wins: Small Creators to Big Studios
Early results are promising. David Coles of Just Creepy: Scary Stories nearly doubled his Spotify revenue, and major players like YMH Studios (2 Bears, 1 Cave) saw revenue triple.
YMH’s head of ad sales, Alan Abdine, called it a “game-changer”—with more upside likely as the program scales.
Q2 Outlook: Controlled Burn, Steady Growth
Spotify is guiding to €4.3 billion in Q2 revenue and €539 million in operating income, with a gross margin of 31.5%. The company remains confident in hitting 20% constant currency revenue growth for the year, but signaled that pricing updates will roll out strategically—not uniformly—across markets.
Bottom Line: Expanding Beyond the Stream
This quarter marked Spotify’s first earnings report since its full-year profitability milestone in 2024. The company is doubling down on music while growing its stake in the video and audiobook game. Ek was clear: if new bets don’t carry conviction, they won’t move forward.
Spotify’s user growth, content diversification, and creator incentives signal a platform evolving past pure music streaming—and staying sticky even when margins get messy.