Why Does It Say Spotify Can’t Play This Right Now? | Fix It

Spotify shows this playback error when the app, track, account, device, cache, or connection blocks the song.

That message can feel random, but it usually has a plain cause. Spotify is trying to start a song, yet one part of the playback chain refuses the request. The track may be unavailable, the app may be holding bad cached data, or the selected device may not be the one making sound.

Start with the least disruptive fixes. You don’t need to wipe the app right away. Most cases clear after checking the track, restarting playback, switching the output device, or clearing the cache.

Why Spotify Says It Can’t Play This Track Right Now

The error does not point to one single fault. It’s more like a stop sign. Spotify reached a track or playback request, then found a reason it couldn’t play it on that device at that moment.

The cause is often local to your app. A stale cache can make Spotify act like a song is playable when the stored data is broken. A desktop app can lose track of an audio output after headphones, Bluetooth speakers, or system sound settings change.

It can also be tied to the song itself. Some tracks are removed, replaced, restricted by region, or grayed out inside an old playlist. When that happens, another version of the same song may play fine, while the old saved copy throws the error.

Start With The Small Fixes

These checks take little effort and don’t delete downloads, playlists, or settings. Work through them in order:

  • Play a different song from search, not from the same playlist.
  • Tap the device picker and choose “This device” if another speaker is selected.
  • Pause, close Spotify fully, then open it again.
  • Switch from Wi-Fi to mobile data, or from mobile data to Wi-Fi.
  • Turn off offline mode if it’s on.
  • Check whether the same track plays in the web player.

If one song fails but others work, the track is the problem. Search for the title and artist, then save a newer copy from the album or artist page. Old playlist entries can remain visible after catalog changes.

If every song fails, treat it as an app, device, network, or account problem. The pattern matters more than the warning itself: one broken song asks for a catalog fix, while a full playback failure asks for an app or device reset.

When One Song Fails And The Rest Play

This points to catalog or playlist data, not your phone. Open the artist page, search the song title, and test the album version that appears there. If that copy starts, remove the old playlist entry and save the working one.

A gray title, missing album art, or an instant skip is a strong clue. The song may have been replaced by a new release page, changed by region, or removed from the catalog. Your playlist can still hold the old entry, even when Spotify can no longer stream it.

When Every Song Fails

When every track fails, the app needs a reset path. Start with the device picker, then the network, then cache. This order matters because it protects your downloads and avoids extra work.

Test on another device before deleting anything. If your phone plays fine but your laptop fails, the laptop is the source of the trouble. If phone, desktop, and web all fail, sign out everywhere and sign back in.

Common Causes And The Right Fix

Spotify’s playback page groups many of these checks together: stable internet, cache, offline mode, and local files. The table below turns that into a practical order.

Likely Cause What You’ll Notice What To Do
Unavailable track One song fails, often from an old playlist Search the title and save a newer album version
Damaged cache Many songs fail, skip, or stall Clear Spotify cache, then restart the app
Wrong output device Progress bar moves but no sound plays Choose this device in the device picker
Offline mode Streaming songs fail while downloads may play Turn offline mode off and reconnect
Weak connection Playback works on one network but not another Change networks and turn off VPN testing
Local file access Your own files show but won’t start Check local file setup, permissions, and format
App version mismatch The error remains after basic restarts Update Spotify or use reinstall steps
Account session glitch The same app acts odd after login changes Sign out everywhere, then sign in again

Fix Spotify Playback By Device

On Windows or Mac, start with the audio output. Spotify may still be aimed at a Bluetooth speaker, dock, monitor, or virtual sound device that is no longer ready. Open your system sound settings, set your normal speaker or headphones as default, then restart Spotify.

Next, clear the cache from Spotify’s settings. This removes temporary playback data, not your playlists. Downloaded songs may need to be fetched again depending on the device, so do it when you have a steady connection.

For iPhone And Android

On phones, the error often appears after switching networks, using offline mode, or running low on storage. Close Spotify from the app switcher, reopen it, then test a song from search. If it plays, return to your playlist and replace any broken saved tracks.

Check storage next. Music apps need room for cache, downloads, artwork, and playback data. If your phone is nearly full, remove old downloads inside Spotify or free space from other apps, then restart the phone.

For Spotify Connect And Speakers

If Spotify is sending audio to a speaker, TV, console, or smart display, the app can show an error when that device drops off the network. Pick “This device” first. If music starts, the speaker connection was the issue.

Then reconnect the speaker from the device menu. Use the same Wi-Fi when pairing a device for the first time, and restart the speaker if it appears in the list but won’t start playback.

What To Try After The Basic Fixes

If the error keeps coming back, move from light checks to stronger resets. Don’t do every reset at once. Change one thing, test a song, then move to the next step.

Situation Next Step Why It Works
Only saved playlist tracks fail Search and replace those songs The saved version may no longer be playable
Only local files fail Check folder access and file format Spotify must be able to reach the file
All tracks fail on one device Clear cache and restart Bad temporary data can block playback
Playback fails only on Wi-Fi Restart router or change networks The network may be blocking the stream
The app still fails after updates Reinstall Spotify A clean app copy can remove broken files

When Local Files Are The Issue

Local files are songs stored on your own device, not streamed from Spotify’s catalog. They can fail when the file was moved, the folder permission changed, or the format is not accepted by the app.

Open Spotify settings and make sure local files are turned on. Then confirm that the folder holding the songs is still selected. Spotify explains where to switch the setting on and choose folders on desktop.

When A Reinstall Is Worth It

Reinstalling should be near the end of the list, not the first move. It can fix broken app files, but you may need to download music again after the app is removed.

Use this step when playback fails across many songs, cache clearing doesn’t help, and Spotify acts the same after a restart. Follow Spotify’s app reinstall process so the app copy is current and clean.

How To Stop The Error From Coming Back

Once Spotify plays again, a few habits reduce repeat errors. Keep enough free storage for cache. Update the app through the official store. Avoid leaving playback handed off to a speaker you won’t use again soon.

For playlists you care about, replace grayed-out songs when you spot them. Search the title and save a live catalog version instead of hanging on to an old entry. For downloads, refresh them after major app updates or long periods offline.

If the message appears only on one device, that device still needs attention. If it follows your account across phone, desktop, and web, sign out everywhere and sign back in. The pattern tells you where the fault sits, and that saves a lot of trial and error.

References & Sources