What Happens to Your Spotify and Apple Music When You Die? Streaming Account and Playlist Inheritance

David spent 12 years curating his Spotify library. Over 200 playlists. 15,000+ songs carefully organized. Workout mixes. Road trip collections. “Songs that remind me of my kids growing up.” Playlists for every mood, occasion, and memory.

When David died at 52, his daughter Emma wanted access to one specific playlist: “Emma’s Childhood Songs” – the soundtrack of her life according to her dad.

The problem:Spotify’s policy: the account can be closed by a family member upon providing proof of death – No inheritance option – No way to transfer playlists – No memorialization feature – Once closed, everything lost forever

Emma called Spotify. They were sympathetic but clear: “We can close the account. We cannot transfer the playlists. Once closed, they’re gone.”

12 years of musical memories—irreplaceable—lost forever.

The same story repeats across all streaming platforms. When you purchase digital content or a licensed digital product, the license only gives you the right to use it while you are alive. You have no right to transfer the content to anyone else, for any reason, ever.

This guide covers what happens to Spotify, Apple Music, and other streaming accounts when you die, how to preserve playlists, and workarounds to save your musical legacy.

The Streaming Music Ownership Problem

You Don’t Own Your Music

The fundamental misunderstanding: When you “subscribe” to Spotify or Apple Music, or “buy” songs on iTunes, you think you’re building a music collection. You’re not.

What you actually have: – A temporary license to stream content – As long as you keep paying – As long as you’re alive – As long as platform exists – As long as artists keep content available

What you DON’T have: – Ownership of music files – Transferable property rights – Inheritance rights – Permanent access – Downloadable files (usually)

Most content accounts do not convey real ownership of the media purchased through them. Instead, you are actually purchasing the ability to use that specific content through the account.

Contrast with physical media: – Vinyl records: You own them, can bequeath them – CDs: You own them, transferable – Cassettes: Physical property, inheritable – Digital streaming: License only, dies with you

The cruel irony: Your grandmother’s vinyl collection is more inheritable than your carefully curated Spotify playlists worth $120/year for 12 years ($1,440 invested).

Platform-Specific Policies

Spotify

Account closure policy: Spotify allows a family member or representative to close your account upon your death. They will need to contact Spotify Customer Service and provide necessary documentation, including a death certificate.

Required documentation: Spotify will require the name on the account, a copy of the death certificate and proof of relationship to the member.

What happens: – Account can be closed by family – No transfer option available – No memorialization feature – All playlists permanently deleted – Listening history lost – Saved songs lost – Followed artists/podcasts lost

What you lose: – All playlists (even if public) – Collaborative playlists you created – Saved albums – Followed artists – Podcast subscriptions – Listening statistics – Discover Weekly history – Wrapped data from previous years

Memorialization: Spotify does not offer an option to memorialize an account; you either need to leave it active or delete it.

In practice: – If family doesn’t notify Spotify, account remains active – Subscription eventually canceled when payment fails – Free tier account stays active indefinitely (but Premium features lost) – No monitoring for deceased users – Enforcement only if reported

Apple Music / iTunes

Legacy Contact limitations: Licensed media, for example, movies, music, and books that the account holder purchased are not available for a Legacy Contact.

What Apple Legacy Contact CAN access: – Photos – Messages – Notes – iCloud files – Calendar – Most iCloud data

What Apple Legacy Contact CANNOT access: – iTunes purchased music – Apple Music playlists – Movies and TV shows – Books – Apps – Any licensed content

Why the limitation: There is no provision to transfer purchased content from one account to another. That is true whether the account holders are dead or alive, or even across two accounts of the same individual.

Apple’s stance: – Music is licensed, not owned – Licenses non-transferable – Cannot be inherited – Even Apple Legacy Contact doesn’t override licensing

What gets lost: – All iTunes purchased music – Apple Music playlists – Loved/favorited songs – Play counts – Personal radio stations – Music recommendations history

Timeline: The legacy contact will have access to the legacy account for a limited time—three years from when the first legacy account request is approved—after which the legacy account is permanently deleted.

But music/licensed content not accessible even during that 3-year window.

YouTube Music

Account status: – Part of Google account – Google Inactive Account Manager applies – Can designate trusted contacts – But licensed content still non-transferable

What happens: – Trusted contact can access some data – Playlists visible (list of songs) – But cannot transfer to their account – YouTube Music subscription ends – Premium features lost – Downloaded music (offline) lost

Uploaded music: – If you uploaded personal files to YouTube Music – Those ARE accessible to trusted contacts – Can be downloaded and preserved – Your uploaded library survives

Amazon Music

Policy: – Similar to other platforms – No inheritance provision – Licensed content non-transferable – Account can be closed by family

What gets lost: – Amazon Music Unlimited subscription – Playlists – Purchased music (technically licensed) – Saved albums and songs

Tidal, Deezer, Other Services

Universal truth across platforms: – All use licensing model – None allow inheritance – Subscriptions terminate – Playlists lost when account closes – No memorialization features – No transfer mechanisms

What Actually Gets Lost

The Intangible Value

Beyond just music access:

Playlists as memory: – “Songs from our wedding” – “Dad’s road trip mix” – “Mom’s workout jams” – “Grandpa’s jazz collection” – Musical timeline of someone’s life

Curation value: – Years of refinement – Discovered obscure tracks – Perfect ordering – Personal significance – Time investment (hundreds of hours)

Emotional connection: – Songs that mattered – Why they mattered – When they mattered – Stories behind choices

Discovery history: – How taste evolved – What you loved at different ages – Soundtrack of your life – Musical autobiography

The Financial Value

Subscription costs over lifetime: – Spotify Premium: $11/month × 12 years = $1,584 – Apple Music: $11/month × 10 years = $1,320 – Total investment: Thousands of dollars – Inheritance value: $0

iTunes purchases: – Average user: $500-2,000 spent – Heavy users: $5,000-10,000+ – Technically “purchased” but just licensed – Inheritance value: $0

The painful truth: Physical CD collection worth $500 → Inheritable property Digital music “purchased” for $2,000 → Lost forever

Preservation Strategies (Before Death)

Option 1: Export Playlists as Lists

Create text documents of playlists:

For Spotify: 1. Open playlist 2. Click “…” menu 3. Share → Copy link 4. Paste link into document 5. Or manually list all songs

Create master document:

DAVID'S SPOTIFY PLAYLISTS

Playlist: Emma's Childhood Songs
- "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" - Traditional
- "You Are My Sunshine" - Johnny Cash
- "Isn't She Lovely" - Stevie Wonder
- [... complete list]

Playlist: Road Trip Classics
- [complete song list]

[All playlists documented]

Value: – Heirs can recreate playlists – Songs preserved as list – Stories can be added – Manual but effective

Limitation: – Doesn’t transfer actual playlist – Heirs must manually rebuild – Time-consuming – Doesn’t capture play order, descriptions

Option 2: Use Playlist Transfer Services (While Alive)

Tune My Music is the #1 platform for transferring and syncing playlists between all major streaming services through official partnerships with Spotify, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, Deezer, TIDAL, and more.

How it works: 1. Create account on Tune My Music (or similar service) 2. Connect your Spotify 3. Select playlists to export 4. Connect heir’s account (Spotify, Apple Music, etc.) 5. Transfer playlists

Other services: – Soundiiz – FreeYourMusic – Playlistor (Spotify ↔ Apple Music)

Use case: – Transfer playlists to family member’s account BEFORE death – Backup important playlists to multiple platforms – Create “archive” account for family

Limitation: – Requires action before death – Ongoing subscription (some services) – Violates ToS if you don’t have permission

Option 3: Share Credentials (Violates ToS)

Simple approach: – Give trusted family member login credentials – They access account after death – Continue using (if Premium paid) – Or export playlists before canceling

Pros: – Simple – Preserves everything – Family can export playlists – No immediate loss

Cons: – Violates Terms of Service – Account sharing prohibited – Could be banned if detected – Security risks

Best practice: – Use password manager with emergency access – LastPass, 1Password, Dashlane – Designated person gets access after death – Document intentions in estate plan

Option 4: Download Music (Where Possible)

Spotify Premium offline downloads: – Can download playlists for offline – But DRM-protected – Can’t transfer files – Stops working when subscription ends – Only for temporary offline use

Apple Music downloads: – Similar DRM protection – Device-locked – Not transferable – Lost when subscription ends

YouTube Music uploads: – Upload your own music files – Those CAN be downloaded – Not DRM-protected (your uploads) – Accessible to Google Legacy Contact

Better option: Purchase DRM-free: – Bandcamp (DRM-free downloads) – Beatport (electronic music, DRM-free) – 7digital (DRM-free) – Direct from artists – These files ARE inheritable property

Option 5: Collaborative Playlists

Spotify collaborative playlists: – Create collaborative version – Add family member as collaborator – They have access even after your death – Their copy remains active

How to set up: 1. Create playlist 2. Click “…” → Make Collaborative 3. Share link with family member 4. They follow/save playlist 5. Both have access

Benefits: – Family member already has access – Survives your account closure – Can continue editing – Legitimate Spotify feature

Limitations: – Only works for collaborative playlists – Family member needs Spotify account – Can’t collaborate on all playlists retroactively – Limited to playlists, not full library

Option 6: Document Stories Behind Songs

Create companion document:

PLAYLIST: Emma's Childhood Songs
Purpose: Songs I sang to Emma as a baby/child

1. "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star"
   - Sang every night before bed
   - Emma would fall asleep by third verse
   - Reminds me of rocking her at 2am

2. "You Are My Sunshine"
   - My grandmother sang this to me
   - I passed it down to Emma
   - Three generations of our family

[Continue for all meaningful songs]

Value: – Context preserved – Stories don’t die – Why songs mattered – Emotional connection maintained

Where to store: – Google Drive (accessible to Legacy Contact) – Physical notebook – Video recording (explain playlists on camera) – Audio notes

Workarounds (Proceed at Own Risk)

Workaround 1: Don’t Cancel Subscription

If account has valid payment: – Don’t notify platform of death – Subscription continues – Family can use account – Playlists remain accessible

Considerations: – Ongoing monthly cost – Violates Terms of Service – Payment method must remain valid – Ethical gray area

When it makes sense: – Family plan (others still using) – Valuable playlists worth monthly fee – Short-term while exporting data

Workaround 2: Transfer to Family Account

Before death (ideal): – Recreate key playlists on family member’s account – Use transfer services – Family member already has access – Nothing lost at death

After death (if credentials available): – Access deceased’s account – Export playlists using transfer service – Import to family member’s account – Preserve playlists before canceling

Tools: – Tune My Music – Soundiiz – FreeYourMusic – Manual recreation

Workaround 3: Public Playlists Archived

Make playlists public before death: – Public playlists visible to anyone – Don’t require account access – Can be followed by others – Somewhat preserved

Process: 1. Make important playlists public 2. Share links with family 3. Family follows playlists 4. Even if your account closes, followers keep playlist?

Reality check: – Spotify may remove playlist when account closes – Unclear if follower copies persist – Not reliable long-term

Workaround 4: Screen Recording/Documentation

Create visual record: – Screen record scrolling through playlists – Screenshots of song lists – Video walkthrough explaining playlists – Audio recording discussing music choices

Benefits: – Preserves what mattered – Context included – Personal touch – Family heirloom

Limitations: – Not playable playlist – Manual recreation required – Time-consuming – But better than nothing

Estate Planning for Music Lovers

Include in Your Digital Estate Plan

Streaming account inventory:

Music Streaming Accounts:
- Spotify Premium: [username], 200+ playlists, 12 years of curation
- Apple Music: [username], 50+ playlists, iTunes library $2,000+
- YouTube Music: [username], uploaded personal collection

Account credentials stored in: [password manager]
Emergency access granted to: [family member]

Playlist documentation:

Most important playlists to preserve:
1. "Emma's Childhood Songs" (Spotify)
   - Location: [link or description]
   - Significance: [why it matters]
   - Instructions: [export using Tune My Music to Emma's account]

2. "Our Wedding Mix" (Apple Music)
   - [details and preservation instructions]

Preservation instructions:

MY WISHES FOR MUSIC ACCOUNTS:

1. Access my Spotify using credentials in [password manager]
2. Use Tune My Music to export these playlists to Emma's account:
   - Emma's Childhood Songs
   - Dad's Road Trip Classics
   - [other specific playlists]
3. Cancel subscription after playlists exported
4. Save playlist documentation in family Google Drive

Do NOT:
- Notify Spotify until playlists exported
- Delete account before backing up
- Assume playlists are saved (they're not)

For Executors: Action Plan

Week 1 (Immediately after death): – ☐ Access music accounts with credentials – ☐ DO NOT notify platforms yet – ☐ Keep subscriptions active temporarily – ☐ Identify most important playlists

Week 2: – ☐ Set up Tune My Music account – ☐ Connect deceased’s Spotify/Apple Music – ☐ Export all playlists to spreadsheet – ☐ Document song lists

Week 3: – ☐ Transfer important playlists to family accounts – ☐ Use playlist transfer service – ☐ Verify transfers successful – ☐ Create backup documentation

Week 4: – ☐ Once playlists preserved, cancel subscriptions – ☐ Close accounts if desired – ☐ Save final documentation – ☐ Notify family playlists are preserved

The Bigger Picture: Digital Ownership Crisis

Streaming Killed Inheritance

The transition: – 1990s: Physical CDs were property – 2000s: iTunes “purchases” felt like ownership – 2010s: Streaming made ownership obsolete – 2020s: Nobody owns music anymore

What we lost: – Property rights – Inheritance rights – Resale rights (used CDs) – Permanent access – Control over our collections

What we gained: – Access to millions of songs – Convenience – Lower upfront cost – Discovery features – Cross-device access

But at what cost? Your music library is now a rental that dies with you.

Future Possibilities

What platforms COULD do: – Legacy features (like Apple Legacy Contact but for playlists) – Playlist inheritance – Memorialized accounts – Transfer mechanisms – Family music library options

Why they won’t (without regulation): – Not in their financial interest – Licensing complications – No competitive pressure – Legal complexity

What might force change: – Consumer advocacy – Legal requirements – EU digital rights regulations – Class action lawsuits – Competitive differentiation

Advocacy

Support legislative efforts: – Digital inheritance rights – Consumer protections – Mandatory legacy features – Playlist portability requirements

Vote with your wallet: – Support platforms with better policies – Buy DRM-free when possible – Prioritize ownership over convenience – Consider physical media for important music

Conclusion

Your Spotify playlists and Apple Music library—representing years of curation and thousands of dollars—have zero inheritance value according to platforms.

The painful truth: – Music is licensed, not owned – Licenses terminate at death – Playlists cannot be officially inherited – When account closes, everything is lost – Your grandmother’s record collection is more inheritable

The practical reality: – Platforms don’t monitor for deaths – Accounts remain accessible with credentials – Playlists can be exported before cancellation – Documentation preserves what mattered – Workarounds exist (violate ToS but effective)

The solution: ✓ Export important playlists to text documents ✓ Use transfer services to copy to family accounts ✓ Make playlists collaborative (Spotify) ✓ Document stories behind songs ✓ Share credentials via password manager ✓ Don’t notify platforms until data preserved ✓ Include music accounts in estate plan

Most important: Your carefully curated musical legacy CAN be preserved, but it requires proactive planning. Don’t assume platforms will help—they won’t.

Act now. Your family’s soundtrack depends on it.


Resources

Sources

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