Spotify has grown from a desktop app into a platform with over 40 million tracks and three billion playlists. It is now on phones, TVs, and even game consoles, yet many powerful features remain hidden from most users.
I have spent years digging through every menu and setting. Skip the basic tips you have heard many times.
Here are 10 often-overlooked tricks that will change how you listen, discover, and manage your music.
Playlist folders let you group playlists into collapsible folders, like files on a PC. You create them on the desktop or web app, and when they exist, they appear on other devices.
In the desktop app, open Your Library, click the plus button, choose Create a playlist folder, name it, then drag playlists into it.
You can also nest folders for finer control. If you have years of playlists, folders turn endless scrolling into a tidy system.
Skip digging for that old road trip playlist. Open your Travel folder, where you’ll also find tracks you saved for your next travel reels.
When you delete a folder, every playlist inside it is deleted, too.
9
Use swipe gestures for faster navigation
Spotify’s mobile app includes swipe gestures that replace multiple taps with one motion.
In any playlist or album view, swipe right on a song to add it to your queue. A brief pop-up confirms it. Swipe left to save it to Liked Songs.
What once required tapping through menus to build a queue before a drive now takes a few swipes.
Spotify lets you recover deleted playlists for up to 90 days. You can’t do this in the app.
Log in to spotify.com and open Recover playlists in the left menu to see everything you deleted in the past three months.
Select a playlist and click Restore. It appears at the bottom of your playlists in the app.
7
Filter out tracks and artists you never want to hear
Hiding a song is useful when there’s a track you don’t like on an otherwise great album. Instead of skipping it every time, you can remove it from playback.
On mobile, tap the three-dot menu next to the track and select Hide in this album. Spotify greys it out and skips it from that playlist.
Blocking an artist goes further. Open the menu from the artist page in the mobile app and choose Don’t play this artist.
Their music stops appearing on algorithmic playlists, radio stations, and your playlists, though tracks where they are only a featured artist can still show up.
6
Switch your music from your phone to other devices in seconds
Spotify Connect lets you use your phone as a remote for Spotify on any compatible device on your network, such as a laptop, smart speaker, TV, or PlayStation.
While a song plays, tap the Device icon on the Now Playing screen to see available devices on your Wi-Fi. Select one, such as your living room speaker, to transfer playback instantly.
You can walk in the door listening to a podcast, transfer it to your smart speaker, and continue listening without missing a word.
5
Use advanced search modifiers to dig deeper into Spotify
Spotify’s search bar supports advanced commands to filter results precisely. Here are a few simple modifiers to zero in on what you want:
- Find music from a specific year or date range (for example, year:1995 or year:2001-2005).
- Search within a specific musical style (for example, genre:”dream pop”).
- Find all music released by a particular record label (for example, label:”warp”).
You can use any combination of the advanced search options to find exactly what you want.
For example, genre:”lofi” year:2018-2020 label:”chillhop records” would pull up lo-fi tracks released between 2018 and 2020 under Chillhop Records.
4
Get the most out of Spotify’s different algorithm playlists
Spotify’s core strength is its recommendation engine. Each algorithmic playlist serves a specific job.
Learn how they work, and you move from passive listening to actively discovering songs you’ll love.
- Discover Weekly updates every Monday and shows tracks you likely have not heard, based on your history and the habits of listeners with similar tastes.
- Release Radar refreshes on Fridays and highlights new releases from artists you follow or often play.
- Daily Mixes updates daily and shows familiar favorites with a few algorithm-picked tracks in the same genre or mood.
Your actions train these playlists. Save or add a song to signal you like it. Skip a track within the first 30 seconds to signal the opposite.
Spotify uses this feedback to refine your taste profile and sharpen recommendations, so use each list with intent.
Open Discover Weekly when you want something new. Check Release Radar to stay current with your favorite artists. Turn to Daily Mixes for familiar sounds with a few fresh surprises.
3
Optimize bitrate settings to balance sound quality with data savings
Spotify lets you set the bitrate (audio fidelity) to balance sound quality and data use. Higher bitrates sound better but use more data.
In Settings > Audio Quality, you’ll find separate options for streaming and Downloads.
If you use data, set playback to Normal (around 96 kbit/s) or High (around 160 kbit/s).
Use Very High (around 320 kbit/s; Premium only) for full quality on Wi-Fi and Downloads.
Downloads happen once and save locally, so you get the best quality with no ongoing data use.
2
Crossfade and Gapless Playback make albums sound complete
Two Spotify toggles, Gapless Playback and Crossfade, make playlists flow like a pro mix.
Gapless Playback removes the silence between tracks. Crossfade blends tracks, fading one out as the next fades in.
These features are useful for albums designed to play continuously. Classic records such as Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon and the Beatles’ Abbey Road were designed to play like this.
Instead of hearing separate tracks, these toggles let you hear the album as intended, a continuous playthrough that maintains energy.
You will find both in Settings > Playback. Turn on Gapless Playback and Crossfade, and set the overlap with the slider. A 3- to 5-second fade usually works best and keeps transitions smooth.
1
How to fall asleep with music without draining your phone
Spotify’s mobile app includes a sleep timer that stops music or podcasts after a set duration.
On the Now Playing screen, tap the three-dot menu in the upper-right corner and select Sleep timer.
Choose a duration from five minutes to one hour, or select End of track to stop when the current song finishes.
There is a clock icon on the playback screen for this feature on podcasts.
This is useful if you fall asleep to audio. The timer prevents playlists or episodes from running all night, reduces battery drain, and avoids a loud surprise at 3 a.m.
Spotify keeps evolving with new features
Spotify’s beauty is that it’s always evolving. Over the years, it has added many useful features that distinguish it from rivals.
Now, the platform is entering a new era with AI-driven features like AI DJ and AI playlist creation, giving you a handpicked listening experience.
The key is to step past the defaults and experiment. Start with one of the tweaks from this list, then keep exploring as new features roll out.