Spotify gift cards usually come in 1, 3, 6, or 12-month values, and the price shifts by country, card type, and seller.
A Spotify gift card sounds simple: you pay once, the listener gets Premium time, and nobody has to hand over a card number for monthly billing. Then you start shopping and the pricing gets messy. Some cards are priced in months. Some are priced in money. Some stores list a flat dollar value. Others sell a “subscription” card with a set term.
That mix is why people keep asking the same thing: how much is a Spotify gift card, really? The clean answer is that there isn’t one universal price. Spotify sells and accepts gift products in more than one format, and stock changes by country. A card in the U.S. may be sold in dollars, while another market may lean on 1, 3, 6, or 12-month options.
If you’re buying one, the smart move is to match the card type to the account that will redeem it. Price matters, but so do plan limits, country matching, and the gap between the card’s face value and the monthly price of Premium in that market. That’s where people save money, or waste it.
How Much Is A Spotify Gift Card? By Country And Seller
The price of a Spotify gift card depends on three things: where you buy it, what kind of card it is, and which country it is made for. Spotify’s own gift-card rules split cards into two broad buckets. One bucket is currency-based, like a $10 or $60 card. The other is month-based, like 3 months or 12 months of Premium.
That sounds like a small detail, but it changes how you shop. A currency card acts more like stored value. A month card acts more like prepaid service. If you buy without checking which one you’re getting, it’s easy to think two listings are the same when they’re not.
Spotify also says availability depends on country. So a buyer in one market may see a neat row of 1, 3, 6, and 12-month choices, while a buyer somewhere else may mostly run into retailer listings that use cash values. You’re not looking at a broken search result. You’re seeing regional stock and regional packaging.
In the U.S., retailer listings often show values like $10, $12, $30, $60, $72, and $99. Those numbers line up with either set money amounts or fixed subscription lengths sold in digital form. Since Spotify Premium pricing can change, the same gift card amount may feel better or worse over time. A 12-month card bought at an older price can look like a bargain after a monthly rate rise.
What Buyers Usually Find In Stores
Most shoppers run into one of these formats first:
- Single-month or short-term subscription cards
- 3-month, 6-month, or 12-month prepaid cards
- Currency-value cards, such as $10, $30, or $60
- Digital email delivery cards from large retailers
- Physical cards sold in grocery, electronics, or big-box stores
The price printed on the card is only part of the story. You also want to know what that price turns into after redemption. Does it buy one clean block of Premium time? Does it apply balance against the full standalone Premium price? That answer shapes whether the card is a plain gift, a budgeting tool, or a decent deal.
What The Card Price Actually Buys
A Spotify gift card is not a blank pass for every Spotify plan. Spotify says gift cards work on the full-price standalone Premium plan, and they can’t be applied to discounted offers or multi-user plans like Student, Duo, or Family. That catches plenty of buyers off guard, mostly when they buy a card for someone who already uses a cheaper or shared plan.
So, if you’re pricing the card by value, don’t stop at the shelf tag. Ask a better question: how many months of the standard individual plan will this card cover in the country where it will be redeemed? That gives you the number that matters.
Here’s the practical way to think about it. A $60 card is not “worth six months” by default. It is worth $60. If the full standalone Premium plan in that market is above or below $10 a month, the months covered will shift. A 6-month subscription card, on the other hand, buys that term directly.
That split is why subscription cards can feel cleaner. You know what the recipient gets. Currency cards are more flexible, but the exact run time can change with local pricing.
| Card Format | What You Pay | What The Recipient Gets |
|---|---|---|
| 1-month subscription card | One month at local seller price | One month of standalone Premium |
| 3-month subscription card | Three-month bundle price | Three months of standalone Premium |
| 6-month subscription card | Six-month bundle price | Six months of standalone Premium |
| 12-month subscription card | Annual prepaid price | Twelve months of standalone Premium |
| Currency-value card | Face value such as $10, $30, or $60 | Balance applied against standalone Premium |
| Digital email card | Usually same face value as listed | Code sent by email for online redemption |
| Physical retail card | Face value on packaging | Scratch code or printed code for redemption |
| Discounted promo listing | Less than face value during a sale | Same card value, if sold by a trusted seller |
Spotify Gift Card Prices Compared With Premium Rates
This is the part that helps most shoppers. A gift card can be a plain prepaid card, or it can beat the month-to-month rate. That gap depends on current Premium pricing and on whether the card is sold at face value or in a fixed-term bundle.
Spotify’s U.S. Premium Individual listing now shows a monthly rate of $12.99. Against that, a retailer’s $99 annual card works out to a lower monthly cost than paying one month at a time. That doesn’t mean every shopper will see the same value in every country, but it shows why annual cards sell fast when prices climb.
If you’re buying for yourself, the question is simple: do you want the lower effective monthly cost, or do you want a smaller upfront spend? If you’re buying for someone else, the better question is whether the card will redeem cleanly on their account right now.
Spotify’s gift-card page is a good place to check the current ground rules before you buy. It lays out which plans work with gift cards and notes that availability shifts by market. You can view those Spotify gift card rules before you pick a card.
Why Some Prices Look Odd
Those odd values you see, like $12 or $72, are not random. They often line up with local monthly pricing or fixed term bundles that retailers package as email-delivery cards. A $72 card, in plain terms, may be sold as six prepaid months. A $99 card may be sold as a year card. A $30 or $60 card acts more like stored value.
That means you shouldn’t compare every card side by side as if they’re the same product. Some are “this amount of money.” Others are “this amount of time.” That’s the whole ballgame.
When A Spotify Gift Card Is Worth Buying
A Spotify gift card makes sense in a few spots. It’s a clean present for someone who already listens every day. It also works well for teens or anyone who doesn’t want a card on file. And if you spot a long-term card below the current monthly rate, it can trim what you’d spend across the year.
It also gives the recipient room to pause the billing-card problem. They can redeem the code and use Premium time without sharing bank or card details with the giver. For a lot of buyers, that matters more than squeezing out the last dollar of value.
Still, a gift card is a poor fit if the recipient uses Duo, Family, or Student and wants to keep that plan. Spotify says gift cards don’t apply to those discounted or shared options. In that case, cash may be the better gift.
Good Times To Buy
- When you see a real retailer sale on a 6-month or 12-month card
- When monthly Premium pricing has gone up
- When the recipient uses the standalone Premium plan
- When you want a fixed spend with no recurring bill
- When you need a last-minute digital gift by email
What To Check Before You Pay
Before you hit buy, check the country, the plan rules, and the delivery format. Country matching matters because Spotify says the account and the card need to line up with the place of purchase. A U.S. card may not help someone whose account is set to another region.
Then check whether the card is physical or digital. A digital card is handy for speed, but you want a trusted seller and a clear delivery note. A physical card works fine too, though it can come with shipping delays or stock gaps.
One more thing: read the listing title slowly. “Gift card,” “subscription card,” “annual card,” and “Premium eGift” can point to different formats. The wording matters because it tells you whether you’re buying balance or a fixed term.
| Before You Buy | Why It Matters | What To Do |
|---|---|---|
| Country match | Redemption can fail across regions | Buy a card made for the account’s country |
| Plan type | Gift cards do not work on every Premium plan | Check that the user has or wants standalone Premium |
| Card format | Money-value and month-value cards work differently | Read whether the listing shows dollars or months |
| Seller trust | Third-party codes can be messy | Stick with known retailers and official terms |
| Current Premium rate | It shapes the card’s real value | Compare the card with the live monthly price |
| Delivery speed | Some gifts need instant arrival | Pick email delivery if time is tight |
How To Judge If The Price Is Good
If you want the fastest test, split the card price by the months you’ll get. Then compare that result with the current standalone monthly price in that market. If the per-month figure is lower, you’ve found a better deal than paying month to month. If it matches the live rate, you’re buying convenience, not savings.
You can also check Spotify’s live Premium page to see what the standard plan costs right now before you buy a long-term card. The current Spotify Premium Individual price makes that comparison easy in the U.S.
That little bit of math keeps you from overrating a flashy listing. A gift card can still be worth buying at full price if the goal is gifting or prepaid access. But if your goal is value, the monthly equivalent is the number that tells the truth.
Common Buying Mistakes
The biggest mistake is assuming every Spotify card works like cash. Some don’t. Another is buying a card for the wrong region. After that, the top slip-up is buying for someone on Family, Duo, or Student and finding out the code won’t help with that plan.
Another miss is chasing a suspiciously cheap code from a random marketplace. If the discount looks wild, stop and read the seller terms. A small sale from a known retailer is normal. A huge markdown from a sketchy source can leave you with a dead code and no clean fix.
There’s also a softer mistake: buying a giant card for a casual listener. If the person only uses Spotify on and off, a shorter card may fit better than a full year. The best gift isn’t always the biggest one. It’s the one that matches how they listen.
So, How Much Should You Expect To Pay?
For most shoppers, the honest answer is this: expect Spotify gift cards to show up as either short-term or long-term prepaid subscription cards, or as cash-value cards that mirror local Premium pricing. In the U.S., you’ll often see values like $10 to $99, with common stops at $12, $30, $60, $72, and $99 depending on seller and format.
If you want the cleanest pick, buy the card that spells out the term in months and matches the recipient’s country. If you want more flexibility, buy a currency-value card and let the balance apply to standalone Premium time. Either way, the shelf price is only half the answer. The card type tells you what that price turns into.
References & Sources
- Spotify.“Spotify gift cards.”Lists gift-card use rules, notes that availability varies by country, and states that cards are sold in 1, 3, 6, and 12-month values.
- Spotify.“Spotify Premium.”Shows the live U.S. Premium Individual monthly price used for comparing prepaid card value with month-to-month billing.
