If you and your friends have the same taste in music, you probably text each other what you’re listening to. I know when I stumble upon a new discovery I love—or even something I think is trash—I fire it off to the group chat to talk about it. Of course, I just forward the song to the group chat in the Messages app, like any other thing I’d want to send to that group. If you have Spotify, however, you have a new group chat option to choose from: Spotify itself.
Spotify heads might already know that the app has had a messaging feature since August. While the point of the feature is to send Spotify content to your friends, it’s a basic messaging service, which means you can send any text you want—including emojis. It’s available to any Spotify user, whether you have Premium or just a free account, so long as you’re 16 or older. None of that is new today.
What is new today is the amount of people you can text at once in Spotify. Since August, chats have been limited to one-on-one interactions. Now, you’re able to add up to nine other people at once to a thread. That means 10-person group chats to talk about new music, podcasts, audiobooks, or, of course, anything at all—assuming you actually want to move your DMs to Spotify.
How to start a group chat on Spotify
To start, open Spotify on mobile (this isn’t supported on desktop at this time) then tap your profile in the top right corner. Look for “Messages” at the bottom of this menu, then choose “New Message.” If this is your first time interacting with people on Spotify, you’ll need to invite others to chat before you can craft a new message. Here, you’ll have the choice to share a link to invite a friend to join your message. You can also find this option from the share menu on any piece of Spotify content, and hitting the “Invite friends” option.
Once you’ve initiated a message, you’ll be able to start crafting new ones—including group chats. Head back to this Messages menu—or hit the share button on a song, podcast, or audiobook—then choose “Create group.” Here, tap any friends from the suggestions you’d like to add, then choose “Create group” again to finalize the chat. Spotify says the people that appear in the list of suggestions are those you have shared content to before, created a playlist or Blend with previously, were in a “recent” Jam together, or are on an active Family or Duo plan. If they don’t appear, you can always choose the invite option to reach out directly.
What do you think so far?
Whoever creates the group is officially its admin. As the admin, you have the power to add or remove anyone from the group chat. If you’re in the group chat, you’re labeled as a “Participant.” Invited members are labeled “Pending.” The admin as well as any participants are allowed to block any group chat user for any reason.
The issue is, do you really want to dedicate a group chat to Spotify itself? Maybe if this feature rolled out when the app launched way back when, it’d be different. But people are set in their ways: It’s so hard to get people to move chat apps, especially when it’s for one specific purpose. Rather than open yet another thread to keep track of, I think I’d rather just text links to my main group chat—and I’m guessing the other members of the chat would agree.
How to turn off Spotify Messages
If you don’t want to use Spotify’s messaging service at all, you can leave it behind, and save yourself from getting added to all future group and one-on-one chats. To do so, tap your profile, choose “Settings and privacy,” then hit “Privacy and social.” Here, scroll down to “Social features” and turn off “Messages.”