Spotify icon
Windows · macOS · Linux · Android · iOS · Free
Spotify 1.2.23
↓ Free Download

Spotify how to Cancel

Canceling your Spotify account takes just a few clicks—whether you're on desktop, mobile, or the web player. Here's exactly how to do it.

Spotify How to Cancel Through the Web Player

The easiest way to cancel is through your account settings on the Spotify website. Open your browser and go to your account page (you'll need to log in first). Click Account in the top menu, then select Cancel Premium or Delete Account depending on what you want.

If you're on the free tier and just want to close everything, scroll down to find the "Delete Account" option. Spotify will ask you to confirm—they'll send a verification email, so check your inbox immediately.

The web player method works across all platforms: Windows 10, macOS, Linux Ubuntu, Android devices, and iOS iPhones.

Spotify How to Cancel on Mobile Devices

Canceling from your phone is slightly different. On both Android and iOS, open the app and tap your profile icon (bottom right). Go to Settings and PrivacyAccountCancel Premium.

On iOS specifically, you can also manage your subscription through the Apple App Store: Settings → Tap your name → Subscriptions → Find Spotify → Tap Cancel Subscription. The same option exists on Android through Google Play.

Mobile cancellation is fast but sometimes confusing—the web method remains clearer.

What Happens After You Cancel?

Your Spotify Premium benefits stop immediately. If you're mid-billing cycle, you lose ad-free listening and offline downloads right away—Spotify doesn't issue refunds for partial months.

Free tier users keep their account and can still stream music with ads. Your playlists stay intact if you upgrade later, though the cross platform music player won't save new offline content until you reactivate.

Full Account Deletion vs. Canceling Premium

There's a difference. Canceling Premium drops you to the free tier. Deleting your account removes everything—your login, playlists, listening history, and saved songs vanish permanently.

If you just want to stop paying but might return, cancel Premium. If you're done completely, delete the account.

Why People Cancel (And What to Know)

Some users switch to competitors like MediaMonkey for local library management because they prefer offline-first workflows. Others move to jetAudio's advanced audio controls. If you're canceling for a specific reason—limited offline downloads, missing features—those tools worth checking out.

Spotify's free music streaming tier has real limits: shuffle-only playback on mobile, ad interruptions every few songs, and no offline syncing. The Premium plan removes all three. If cost is the issue, that's worth considering before you leave.

Pro Tip: Before canceling, export your playlists. Spotify doesn't make this obvious, but you can download a CSV of your saved songs through third-party apps or manually recreate playlists in competitor software. Don't lose your taste in music just because you're switching services.

Reactivating Later

Changed your mind? You can reactivate anytime by logging back in and upgrading. Your old playlists and followers are still there—Spotify doesn't erase history after cancellation.

Final Steps for Spotify How to Cancel

Make sure you're logged into the correct account (especially if you use multiple emails). Confirm the cancellation email Spotify sends. Check your payment method to ensure charges have stopped—sometimes they take one more billing cycle to fully process.

That's it. The actual cancellation is simple; the confusion usually comes from account vs. subscription settings. Use the web player for the clearest path forward.