Spotify vs. Deezer

Two smartphones overlapping displaying the Deezer and Spotify apps

If you’re looking for a new music streaming service, the current king of the ring is Spotify. But should you be giving some lesser-known contenders a try? There aren’t many differences between Spotify and Deezer. They’re both streaming services with similar functionality and available content. Now that Spotify HiFi is coming out soon, the only major differences between Deezer and Spotify will be that Spotify is a lot more popular.

Editor’s note: this article was updated on December 14, 2022, to address FAQs and update pricing details.

Spotify vs. Deezer: User interface and functionality

Pictured is the Deezer app now playing screen held in hand against blue tile background

The background color of the main “Now Playing” section in Deezer changes color depending on the song you’re listening to.

As someone who values aesthetics a lot, I have to say I’m impressed by both Spotify and Deezer. Deezer has a bright user interface with lots of color, and a nice uniform font for everything. The Music page has different sections including “Your favorite artists,” “Recommended playlists,” “Music by genre,” “Popular playlists,” and “Made for you.”

Spotify’s interface is dark-themed and similarly very easy to navigate. Its “Home” page features recommended music for the current time of day, recently played music, new releases, and a “Made for You” section. When it comes to the actual music player, I think Spotify is a bit more attractive than Deezer, but beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Spotify also supports animated cover art, so sometimes you’ll see short videos to playing during certain songs. For example, Cornelia Street by Taylor Swift repeats a 5 second montage of pictures of her in nature.

Deezer and Spotify both have similar functionality within their interface; you can skip songs, like songs, add to queue, adjust the playback mode, and with Spotify in particular you can select which device to stream from. Some songs on Spotify have a “Behind the Lyrics” feature, which comes from Spotify’s partnership with Genius, and explains certain parts of a song based on things the artist has said about it. Deezer has a feature that lets you view the lyrics of a song as they’re being sung.

Both Deezer and Spotify allow you to dislike songs on some of their algorithmically-designed playlists, and you can specify if it’s the song you don’t like—or the artist in particular. Once you like a song on either streaming service, it gets added to a playlist. On Deezer, the “Favorites” tab keeps track of everything you’ve saved and downloaded along with any playlists you’ve made, and it keeps track of your top tracks and MP3s you’ve uploaded for local file playback (“My MP3s”). On Spotify, “Your Library” works the same way, and you can enable local files to be visible from your account settings.

No, 360 by Deezer has not been supported since November 2022. If you subscribed to Deezer using a 360 by Deezer offer that came with a Sony product, you’ll still be able to use the Deezer app. Unused Sony gift codes expired after October 31, 2022.

Unfortunately, Deezer could use some development love, as there are a few gremlins in its app. In his quest for a new music streaming service after Google Play Music died, Sound Guys editor Chris has reported that every time he tried to make a playlist in Deezer the app would crash, and there have been plenty of similar complaints on Deezer’s forums. These issues seem to strike rather unlucky individuals, as there hasn’t been a mass exodus from the service just yet. Just be aware that you may run into issues from time to time.

Spotify vs. Deezer: Music discovery

The Deezer and Spotify interfaces side by side

Both Deezer and Spotify have charming user interfaces, making it easy to navigate new and saved music.

Spotify has the infamous “Discover Weekly” playlist which updates every Monday with new songs Spotify’s algorithm thinks you will like. In addition, it has the “Release Radar” playlist which updates weekly with newly released songs from the artists you follow, and “Daily Mix” playlists. Spotify regularly recommends additional playlists, albums, and radios based on your listening history. Besides personalized algorithmically-designed playlists, Spotify has an extensive catalog of editorial playlists categorized by mood, genre, activity, culture, and more.

The “Made for You” section of Deezer includes several different daily mixes created by the Deezer personalized algorithm. It also recommends playlists and stations based on mood, what’s currently popular, and what Deezer thinks you will like. Deezer’s main discovery feature is “Flow,” which is a never-ending playlist that can be modified in real time by blacklisting tracks and/or artists. Flow is built based on all of your music tastes—at least, the ones you’ve shared with the service, anyway. Deezer also has a weekly “Discovery” playlist, a “New Releases” playlist, and a “Chill” playlist all based on your preferences.

Both Spotify and Deezer create Radios or Mixes of related songs based on songs and artists. Spotify also creates them for playlists that you make. All in all, the music discovery features of Spotify vs. Deezer are very similar.

Spotify vs. Deezer: Available content

Music

When it comes to their respective music catalogs, there aren’t too many differences between Spotify and Deezer. They both have upwards of 80 million tracks, including podcasts and all the underground music you could wish for. Both streaming services accept submissions from unsigned artists and signed artists alike. Deezer, however, is available in many more countries across the world than Spotify.

Both streaming services allow you to upload your own files for local media playback, and both services allow you to download songs for offline listening.

Podcasts

Close-up of podcast section on Spotify app in iOS.

Spotify has a large collection of podcasts including some exclusive shows.

Spotify has more podcasts than almost any other service, but Deezer is continuing to add shows to their catalog. Deezer’s Shows tab allows you to browse podcasts by their duration, which is a cool feature that Spotify doesn’t have. On either streaming service, you can browse podcasts by topic, popularity, network, and more. Spotify and Deezer both have original podcasts and Spotify has quite a few exclusive deals with shows, such as The Michelle Obama Podcast.

Exclusive artist content

Deezer Originals include Live EPs which artists record in Deezer’s studios and are exclusively available on Deezer. Spotify Singles is pretty much the exact same thing—but for Spotify. In addition, artists can publish an “About” page on their profile, and Spotify’s artist profiles allow artists to make their personal playlists available for fans to listen to.

When it comes to how much each streaming service pays their artists, Deezer comes out on top (at least, by a per-stream revenue of a single artist reported by The Trichordist), but not by a huge amount. Of course, take this chart with a heaping helping of salt, because the payouts change all the time, and vary based on revenues for each service.

Digital Service Provider$ Per Stream

Peloton

$0.03107

iHeartRadio

$0.01798

Amazon Music Unlimited

$0.01123

YouTube Music/Premium (formerly YouTube Red)

$0.01009

Napster/Rhapsody

$0.00916

Tidal

$0.00876

Apple Music

$0.00675

Deezer

$0.00562

Amazon Prime Music

$0.00426

KKBox

$0.00408

Spotify

$0.00348

Loen

$0.00235

Pandora

$0.00203

YouTube

$0.00154

Yandex LLC

$0.00109

Vevo

$0.00083

UMA

$0.00022

YouTube Content ID

$0.00022

Like I said, there aren’t that many differences between Spotify vs. Deezer when it comes to content, but Spotify has more podcasts than Deezer and a few more artist exclusives, so it wins this round just by a tad.

Spotify vs. Deezer: Audio quality

The biggest thing that still sets Deezer and Spotify apart is audio quality. While Spotify announced a Spotify HiFi tier would drop by the end of 2021, we have yet to see that happen in December 2022. Meanwhile, Deezer already has a HiFi setting, which plays lossless FLAC files at 16-bit/44.1kHz, so long as you pay for Deezer HiFi. Deezer Free’s audio quality tops out at 128kbps via MP3 files, and Deezer Premium’s is 320kbps. You can also download audio files of any of these quality settings. You can adjust your audio quality playback settings at any time and can even preset them to play or download certain quality types over WiFi vs data. This can come in useful because streaming and downloading FLAC files takes up a lot of data and storage space. Keep in mind that if you want to enjoy all the benefits of Deezer HiFi audio quality, you need a good set of studio headphones or speakers—your earbuds aren’t going to cut it.

Spotify currently only has lossy file options, AAC and Ogg Vorbis. Spotify Free’s audio quality tops out at 160kbps and Spotify Premium’s maximum quality is 320kbps—the same as Deezer Premium. You can switch between streaming quality and download quality at any time on Spotify, and you can set your downloads to only occur over WiFi. When Spotify HiFi does become available, it will offer 16-bit lossless audio. The company also openly shared that its initial rollout will be limited to specific regions. Spotify HiFi will put Spotify in a stronger position against lossless services like Tidal HiFi and Qobuz.

Both Spotify and Deezer have adjustable EQ settings, so you can edit the sound signature of your playback to be however you like it.

Spotify vs. Deezer: Pricing

Both services offer a free, ad-supported tier and both offer free trials of Premium to test the waters.

To read more about the differences between the Spotify subscriptions, read our in-depth Free Spotify vs Spotify Premium article.

SubscriptionPriceFeatures

Subscription

Spotify Free

Price

Free

Features

– Listen to music with ad interruptions
– Shuffle music
– On-demand playback from 15 Spotify-created playlists

Subscription

Spotify Premium Student

Price

$4.99/mo

Features

– Listen to music ad-free
– Download music for offline listening
– On-demand playback
– SHOWTIME and ad-supported Hulu

Subscription

Spotify Premium Individual

Price

$9.99/mo

Features

– Listen to music ad-free
– Download music for offline listening
– On-demand playback

Subscription

Spotify Premium Duo

Price

$12.99/mo

Features

– 2 separate Premium accounts for a couple under one roof
– Duo Mix: a playlist algorithmically created and updated for both members
– Listen to music ad-free
– Download music for offline listening
– On-demand playback

Subscription

Spotify Premium Family

Price

$15.99/mo

Features

– Up to 6 Premium accounts for family members living under one roof
– Family Mix: a playlist algorithmically created and updated for all members
– Can block explicit music
– Spotify Kids: app for kids 12 and under
– Listen to music ad-free
– Download music for offline listening
– On-demand playback

SubscriptionPriceFeatures

Subscription

Deezer Free

Price

Free

Features

– Ad supported
– Shuffle play
– Personalized recommendations
– 128kbps MP3 audio

Subscription

Deezer Student

Price

Free for 30 days then $5.99/mo

Features

– No ads
– On demand playback
– Personalized recommendations
– Unlimited access to tracks
– High quality audio
– Offline listening
– 16-bit/44.1kHz FLAC files

Subscription

Deezer Premium

Price

$9.99 for 3 months then $10.99/mo
OR
$98.91/year

Features

– No ads
– On demand playback
– Personalized recommendations
– Unlimited access to tracks
– High quality audio
– Offline listening
– 16-bit/44.1kHz FLAC files

Subscription

Deezer Family

Price

Free for 30 days then $17.99/mo

Features

– No ads
– On demand playback
– Personalized recommendations
– Unlimited access to tracks
– High quality audio
– Offline listening
– 16-bit/44.1kHz FLAC files
– Up to 6 accounts
– Content catered to kids

Because it has an annual plan that saves you over $30 each year, and HiFi included with every paid plan, Deezer wins this round.

Spotify vs. Deezer: Social features

A picture of Spotify Home tab running on a Windows PC

The Friend Activity section on the right updates as your friends change the song they’re listening to.

Many people choose Spotify because of its social features. Spotify can be hooked up to Facebook to easily find your friends’ profiles from where you can view and follow their playlists and artists they’ve recently listened to. Additionally, once you follow your friends, you can view their live listening activity on the desktop Spotify app under “Friend Activity.” If you find it creepy that people can view your activity, you can disable these features.

Another fun social feature is called “Collaborative Playlists,” which is exactly what it sounds like. Anyone who creates a playlist can set it to “Collaborative,” share the link with other Spotify users, and then everyone with the link can make edits and additions to the playlist.

Yes, you can access and share playlists with friends. However, on the free tier, you can only listen to playlists in Shuffle Play mode.

Deezer also allows you to follow your friends’ profiles and view and save their playlists. However, because Spotify is simply a more popular streaming service, it’s likely that you’ll be able to find more of your friends on Spotify than Deezer. Additionally, Deezer does not afford the ability to view your friends’ live listening activity. Both streaming services allow you to share songs to a number of apps, and Spotify has partnerships with Tinder and Bumble so you can display your top songs on your profile.

Spotify vs. Deezer: Additional features

Deezer and Spotify apps side by side on two smartphones

Deezer and Spotify both have special features.

Ever heard of Shazam? Deezer has a similar feature within the app for identifying the song that’s playing wherever you are. In a different vein, Spotify has the Crossfade feature for eliminating the gaps between songs. Both streaming services work with Carplay and Android Auto, but Spotify can also be integrated with Google Maps and Waze.

Listening statistics are another fun feature to keep in mind. Every December, Spotify releases statistics in the form of interactive graphics for each Spotify user to view, called Spotify Wrapped. The graphics display the song you listened to most over the year, how many total minutes you spent listening, who your top new artist was, and more. Deezer has a similar feature called the Stateeztics app, which updates consistently rather than just becoming available once a year. In this app you can view the average number of songs you listen to each day, your top track from the last 30 days, and more.

So which streaming service should you use?

Which streaming service you crown the winner here depends on what you’re looking for in a streaming service. If HiFi audio is the most important thing to you, and you’re not willing to wait for the release of Spotify HiFi, get Deezer HiFi. If you want the ability to easily share music with your friends, go with Spotify Premium.

Not convinced by either of the two? Maybe Amazon Music HD is a better fit for your listening habits. Check out our Amazon Music HD vs Spotify Premium comparison.