
Photo Credit: Spotify
Spotify unveiled Reserved during its Investor Day event and in a formal release. Though said release mentions Live Nation a grand total of zero times, the leading promoter – which kicked off pre-sale ticketing talks with DSPs in early 2025 – is aboard as a launch partner under a multi-year agreement.
At the top level, Reserved seems straightforward enough: Starting with select stateside tours this summer, Spotify intends to identify an artist’s most dedicated fans and reserve “up to two” passes for each of the individuals ahead of the general on-sale.
At least in theory, the approach may simultaneously fuel superfan support for Spotify, box out scalpers, reward artists’ actual listeners, and enable Live Nation to counteract some of the ample pricing/availability criticism it’s still facing.
“Spotify is the exclusive audio streaming service offering this type of reserved access to Live Nation tickets,” Spotify head of live events Rene Volker relayed during her Investor Day presentation. “We will help fans get access to many of the most anticipated tours in the U.S., with more markets coming fast.
“Reserved is one of the most substantial improvements to Spotify Premium since the founding of the company. And this is just the beginning. We see clear opportunities over time to expand the experience in ways that create even more value for fans, for artists, and for Spotify alike,” the longtime Spotify higher-up continued.
First, Spotify shrewdly stressed that demand will outstrip supply; there’ll “be significantly more superfans than there are seats available on a tour, so not every fan will receive an offer,” per the release.
However, when asked about the possibility of disappointing customers with Reserved, co-CEO Gustav Söderström emphasized plans to offer “millions of tickets.”
“But we are talking about us holding millions of tickets,” Söderström spelled out. “This is not a small lottery or something. We’ll make a lot of people very happy.”
“We’ll identify real fans based on factors like streams, shares, and other Spotify activity, and will also monitor the activity of Premium users to ensure these are real human fans and not bots,” the company indicated on this front.
“We don’t just look at streams; we look at everything,” elaborated Volker. “Streams, yes, but also saves, how deep you go into an artist catalog, how you engage with an artist across the entire Spotify experience. The full picture of what it means to be a true fan.”
Regarding pricing, how much will the passes cost? Will extremely excited fans instinctively jump at the chance to secure tickets no matter the charge? And in the bigger picture, is there an opportunity to expand Reserved to include limited-edition physical releases, merch, one-on-one artist communications, and more?
Time will tell, but at present, the market looks to be enthusiastic about Spotify’s Investor Day announcements – also including an audiobooks buildout and a Universal Music gen AI pact. During today’s trading, Spotify stock (NYSE: SPOT) spiked by 13% to nearly $490 per share.