How to Mix for Spotify
Spotify normalizes all tracks to approximately -14 LUFS using their loudness normalization algorithm. If your master is louder, Spotify turns it down — and if it was heavily limited to get there, the result sounds flatter and duller than a more dynamic master at the same target. Understanding how Spotify processes audio is essential to making your music sound competitive without sacrificing dynamic range.
Spotify Technical Specs
How to Optimize Your Mix
Target -14 LUFS Integrated
Aim for -14 LUFS integrated loudness for your final master. This prevents Spotify from turning your track down and losing perceived energy. Use a loudness meter like Youlean or iZotope Insight to measure in real time.
Keep True Peak Below -1 dBTP
Use a true peak limiter set to -1 dBTP to prevent inter-sample peaks that cause distortion during lossy encoding. Spotify transcodes to Ogg Vorbis, which can add up to 0.5 dB of level, so headroom is critical.
Preserve Dynamic Range
Since Spotify normalizes everything to the same loudness, hyper-compressed masters gain no advantage. Aim for a dynamic range (PLR) of 8-10 dB or more. Tracks with dynamics sound more open and impactful after normalization.
Check Both Loud and Normal Modes
Spotify users can choose Loud, Normal, or Quiet normalization. Test your master at -14 LUFS (Normal) and consider how it sounds if a user switches to Loud mode, which targets -11 LUFS and applies limiting.
Deliver High-Quality Source Files
Upload 24-bit WAV or FLAC files at 44.1 kHz through your distributor. Higher-resolution source files give the Ogg Vorbis encoder more data to work with, resulting in better sound quality even at lower bitrates.
Common Mistakes
Smashing the Limiter to -8 LUFS
Mastering to -8 or -9 LUFS thinking it will sound louder on Spotify is counterproductive. Spotify will turn it down to -14 LUFS anyway, and the destroyed dynamics will make your track sound lifeless compared to a more dynamic master at the same perceived loudness.
Ignoring True Peak Ceiling
Setting your limiter ceiling to 0 dBFS instead of -1 dBTP causes inter-sample peaks. When Spotify transcodes to Ogg Vorbis, these peaks create audible clipping artifacts — especially on cymbals, hi-hats, and vocal sibilance.
Not Checking Mono Compatibility
Many Spotify listeners use single Bluetooth speakers or phone speakers that sum to mono. Wide stereo effects and out-of-phase elements will lose level or disappear entirely. Always check your mix in mono before mastering.
Mastering for the Loudness Number, Not the Song
Chasing an exact -14 LUFS reading can harm certain genres. A quiet jazz ballad might naturally sit at -18 LUFS, and that is perfectly fine — Spotify will turn it up. Master for the song, not the meter.
Frequently Asked Questions
By default, Spotify normalizes to -14 LUFS in Normal mode. However, users can switch to Loud mode (-11 LUFS, which applies a limiter to quiet tracks) or Quiet mode (-23 LUFS). The vast majority of listeners use the default Normal mode.
Not for loudness advantage — Spotify will turn you down anyway. However, some genres like EDM or hip-hop benefit from the tonal character of moderate limiting. Mastering to -10 to -12 LUFS is acceptable if the dynamics still sound good, but going beyond that offers no benefit.
Upload 24-bit WAV or FLAC at 44.1 kHz. Spotify will transcode to Ogg Vorbis at up to 320 kbps for Premium users and 128 kbps AAC for free tier. A high-quality source file gives the encoder the best material to work with.
As of early 2026, Spotify has not rolled out widespread Dolby Atmos or spatial audio support for music. They have tested it in limited markets. For now, focus on stereo optimization and monitor announcements for future changes.
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