
Photo Credit: Promusicae
In the early 2000s, Spain ranked among the world’s top 10 recorded music market, reaching as high as #7 in the IFPI’s global table around 2001. According to the IFPI Global Music Report 2025, Spain now sits at #14 worldwide, having been overtaken by faster-growing territories including Mexico and South Korea. That decline was driven by the piracy crisis of the late 90s and early 2000s, which effectively eroded the physical and download revenues in the Spanish market. The result? Spain was under-index on paid streaming compared to its fellow European peers.
Now Promusicae (Productores de Música de España) reports that Spain’s recorded music industry generated wholesale revenues of €409.5 million ($462.3 million) in 2025, up 13.7% year-over-year. That figure takes the market back to revenue levels not seen since 2003, effectively closing a two-decade gap in topline value for the Spanish market.
Photo Credit: Promusicae
Over 21 million people in Spain used audio streaming services in 2025, with more than 8 million of those paying for a subscription. Promusicae says that paid streaming penetration remains below benchmark markets, with plenty of room for growth. While paid music streaming may be growing slowly, physical vinyl sales are booming in the region.
Photo Credit: Promusicae
Physical sales remain a minority in the business, but in 2025 wholesale physical revenues rose 31.6% year-over-year to €41.7 million ($48.4 million) driven primarily by vinyl sales—vinyl accounted for 69% of all physical sales in the region. Vinyl revenues jumped 44.9% year-over-year to €28.9 million ($32.6 million).
While vinyl is having its resurgence in Spain, CDs are also seeing significant growth with sales rising 9.1% year-over-year to €12.6 million ($14.2 million). The current spike suggests vinyl has become a meaningful margin and fan-engagement layer even if physical sales overall only sit at roughly 10% of the total market.
Beyond sales and streaming, neighboring rights and synchronization income also added incrementally to the market report. Neighboring rights managed via AGEDI, the Spanish collecting society, contributed €61.5 million ($69.4 million), up 9.2% year-over-year. Meanwhile, sync revenues from advertising and audiovisual productions clocks in at €4.3 million ($4.9 million) for a 2.2% year-over-year increase.