Does Spotify Have Shazam? | Music Match Facts

No, Spotify doesn’t have Shazam built in, but Shazam can identify songs and send them to Spotify.

If you’re asking whether Spotify can listen to music playing nearby and name it like Shazam, the answer is no. Spotify is mainly a streaming, search, playlist, podcast, and lyrics app. Shazam is a separate music recognition app that listens to a short audio sample, names the track, and can open that result in Spotify.

The good news: the two apps can work together. You can identify a song in Shazam, open it in Spotify, and, on supported setups, save identified songs to a Spotify playlist. That makes the pair handy at cafés, stores, gyms, parties, or while watching shows.

Does Spotify Have Shazam? What The Feature Really Means

Spotify does not include a Shazam-style “listen and identify” button inside the main app. If a song is playing from a speaker across the room, Spotify won’t use your phone’s microphone to match that audio on its own.

What Spotify does have is strong search. If you know the artist, track name, album, or a few lyrics, Spotify can often find the song. Its official search page says you can enter at least three words from the lyrics, then Spotify may show songs marked as a lyrics match. Spotify lyrics search is the closest built-in option when you only remember a line from the song.

Shazam fills the gap Spotify doesn’t fill. It listens to the audio around you, matches it to its catalog, and gives you the track title and artist. From there, you can send the result to Spotify for full playback, saving, or playlist use.

How Shazam And Spotify Work Together

Shazam can connect to Spotify on iPhone and iPad, and Apple’s own Shazam instructions say identified songs can be added to a “My Shazam Tracks” playlist in Spotify when the apps are connected. Shazam’s Spotify connection is built for people who use Shazam to name songs, then use Spotify to play and save them.

There’s also a direct open flow. After Shazam names a song, you can tap the Spotify option to open that track in Spotify. If Spotify shows more than one version, pick the match that fits the song you heard.

What You Can Do After A Song Is Identified

Once Shazam has named the track, Spotify becomes the place where you manage it. You can:

  • Play the full song in Spotify when it’s available in your region.
  • Add it to Liked Songs.
  • Save it to a playlist you already use.
  • Let Shazam place new matches into “My Shazam Tracks,” if your setup offers that sync.
  • Use Spotify radio or related tracks to find similar music.

This setup works well because each app handles a different job. Shazam is for naming songs from sound. Spotify is for listening, saving, sorting, and replaying them later.

When Spotify Can Find A Song Without Shazam

You may not need Shazam if you already know enough about the song. Spotify search can be enough when you remember a lyric, artist, album name, or track theme. It’s also better when you’re trying to find a podcast episode, playlist, audiobook, or artist page.

The limit is simple: Spotify needs text. Shazam needs sound. If you can type a clue, try Spotify. If the song is playing nearby and you don’t know the words, use Shazam.

Situation Better Tool Why It Fits
A song is playing in a shop Shazam It can listen through your phone mic and match the audio.
You remember three or more lyric words Spotify Lyrics search may show songs that contain those words.
You know the artist but not the track Spotify Artist pages and search filters can narrow the result.
You heard a song in a TV scene Shazam It can match clean audio if the scene has little talking over it.
You want to save every found song Shazam + Spotify Shazam can identify; Spotify can store the track in a playlist.
You know only the album name Spotify Album search is built into Spotify’s catalog tools.
You want lyrics while listening Spotify Spotify shows synced lyrics for many tracks.
The song is live, remixed, or noisy Try both Shazam may miss it; Spotify search can help if you catch lyrics.

Taking Shazam Results To Spotify Without Hassle

The cleanest flow is simple. Open Shazam when the song is playing, tap to identify, then use the Spotify option from the result screen. If you connect the accounts, new finds may land in a Spotify playlist built for Shazam matches.

Before you rely on auto-saving, test it with one track. Shazam one song, then open Spotify and check for the playlist. If the track doesn’t appear, disconnect and reconnect Spotify inside Shazam settings, then try another song.

Why Some Matches Don’t Open Correctly

Sometimes a Shazam result won’t open the exact Spotify track you expected. That doesn’t always mean the apps are broken. Music catalogs vary by country, release type, label rights, and version.

A song may also exist in several forms:

  • Single release
  • Album version
  • Radio edit
  • Remaster
  • Live recording
  • Clean or explicit version

If Spotify opens the wrong one, search the song title and artist inside Spotify. Then pick the version that sounds closest to the Shazam result.

Spotify Song Recognition Limits To Know

Spotify is excellent once you know what to search. It is weaker when all you have is sound from the room. That’s why many listeners keep Shazam installed even when Spotify is their main music app.

Spotify also won’t always show lyrics for every track. Its own lyrics page says availability can vary by device, market, song, and rights holder terms. Spotify lyrics availability can affect whether a lyric search leads you straight to the right track.

Need Spotify Alone Shazam With Spotify
Name a song from nearby audio No built-in match tool Yes, through Shazam recognition
Find a song from lyrics Often yes Not the main use
Save found songs Yes, after you find them Yes, with playlist sync on supported setups
Play full tracks Yes, based on plan and catalog access Yes, after opening in Spotify
Track unknown songs over time Manual searching Shazam history plus Spotify playlist use

Best Way To Use Both Apps

Use Shazam as your song catcher and Spotify as your music library. That gives you the best split: one tap to identify, then one place to save and replay.

For a cleaner setup, use this order:

  1. Install both Spotify and Shazam on your phone.
  2. Sign in to Spotify.
  3. Open Shazam settings and connect Spotify if the option appears.
  4. Identify one song with Shazam.
  5. Open Spotify and check for “My Shazam Tracks.”
  6. Add favorite finds to your own playlists so they’re easier to sort.

If you switch phones or reinstall apps, run the same test again. App permissions, account links, and playlist sync can reset during a fresh setup.

Verdict On Spotify And Shazam

Spotify doesn’t have Shazam inside it. It can search songs by title, artist, album, and lyrics, but it doesn’t replace Shazam’s audio recognition. Shazam can name the song, then Spotify can play it, save it, and sort it into playlists.

So the best answer is practical: keep both if you often hear unknown songs in real life. Use Spotify alone when you have words to type. Use Shazam when the song is playing and you want the name before it disappears.

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