This year, the number of people paying for music over a streaming service will overtake people listening for free.
That’s good news for the likes of Spotify, Deezer and Apple Music which have upset the traditional music model.
Experts believe that streaming has made it fashionable to pay for music again, with the latest numbers from November 2018 showing 20.6% opting to pay, up from 18.3% the year before.
At the same time, free streaming – either through services that use adverts, as part of a free trial or with a family license paid for by someone else – is gradually decreasing, currently standing at 21.5%, down from 21.7% previously.
Apple Music is Apple’s answer to Spotify (Apple)
The figures, based on a panel of 1,500 people quizzed by the Entertainment Retailers Association (ERA), show a narrow 0.9% gap between paid and free, indicating a possible victory for paid-for services by the end of 2019.
‘Ten or 15 years ago popular opinion had it that it was all over for the music business and people would no longer pay for music,’ ERA chief executive Kim Bayley said.
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‘These figures are a striking vindication of the innovation and investment of digital services.’
The data shows that more men are already choosing to pay for streamed music instead of free services. Women still prefer free streaming, but the number has fallen 2.6% since 2017.
In terms of age, under-25s are most likely to use a paid subscription compared to any other age group. Under-25s reported a sharp 18.3% drop in usage of free streaming music services from November 2017 to November 2018.
Spotify offers both a free and a paid-for service (Getty Images)
Those aged 25 to 34 are also already using paid options more than free, with the gap narrowing for 35 to 44-year-olds and 45 to 54-year-olds. Those aged 55 and over are most likely to go for free music at 14.90%, compared to 7.20% who pay.
‘What is all the more remarkable is that the likes of Spotify and YouTube also offer fantastic free services, funded by advertising,’ Ms Bayley added.
‘These figures suggest that music fans increasingly believe that the added features offered by paid-for services, and the curation which enables them to navigate literally millions of tracks, are definitely worth the money.’
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