Skip to main content

Spotify is finally bringing offline playback to Wear OS

Spotify is finally bringing a long-awaited feature, offline playback, to its Wear OS app. The company announced it at Google I/O in May, and now a timeline has been laid out for when users can expect to see this feature on their wrists alongside a refreshed design.

“In the coming weeks, Spotify users will be able to play their favorite playlists, albums, and podcasts with their smartwatches that run Wear OS. By having Spotify on your wrist, you’re more free to run, dance, shop, cook, and socialize — and control your music and podcasts at the same time,” Spotify announced in a blog post. “Plus, we’re excited to unveil one of the most requested features by our users: the ability to download all of your favorite music and podcasts to your smartwatch.”

Spotify redesigns its Wear OS app.
Spotify

The new update will be available for Wear OS users on running Wear OS 2.0 or above. This means that you won’t need to buy the new Galaxy Watch 4 or Watch 4 Classic to get in the game, with any reasonably recent smartwatch being supported. Spotify highlights watches from Fossil, Mobvoi, and Suunto as examples of Wear brands.

Recommended Videos

Once it is made available, Premium subscribers will find a new “Download to watch” button under music or podcasts of their choice. Upon downloading, these songs and podcasts will now have a little green arrow, indicating support for offline playback.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Offline playback has been a request for Spotify from wearable users for years, with the company finally bringing it to the Apple Watch in May after a long period of Tizen exclusivity, freeing users from needing to be paired to an iPhone. With it now coming to Wear OS, the streaming service now offers offline support on all major wearable platforms.

Spotify’s announcement coincides with the first product launch featuring Google’s new refreshed Wear OS operating system with the Samsung Galaxy Watch 4. Google also announced an app update of its own to mark the occasion, bringing YouTube Music to the Wear OS platform with offline downloads in tow. Unlike Spotify, however, Google’s own music streaming app is exclusive to Wear OS 3.0. Fortunately for users on older smartwatches, Spotify’s announcement means that an alternate option will be made available in the weeks to come.

Michael Allison
Former Digital Trends Contributor
A UK-based tech journalist for Digital Trends, helping keep track and make sense of the fast-paced world of tech with a…
Google may finally merge Android and ChromeOS after all
FerroChrome preview on a Android phone

Chromebooks and Android devices have always remained two distinct platforms, but a new report suggests that Google might be interested in a closer integration in the future.

Android Authority reports that Google played around with running ChromeOS on a Pixel 8, perhaps as an additional feature for Android devices.

Read more
Wear OS 5 is the future of Android smartwatches. Here’s what’s new
A person wearing the Google Pixel Watch 2.

With the Google I/O 2024 opening keynote having come and gone yesterday, showcasing Google’s various AI initiatives with Gemini AI and more, news about the Wear OS took second fiddle -- until now. After revealing that Wear OS grew its user base by 40% in 2023, Google has just announced Wear OS 5, along with a slew of new watch face updates and health-tracking features.

Here’s what’s new.
Wear OS 5

Read more
The OnePlus Watch 2 is the Wear OS smartwatch I’ve been waiting for
Person wearing OnePlus Watch 2 with a green strap on their left wrist.

The OnePlus Watch 2 -- the company's first Wear OS watch -- has entered a market that Samsung dominates. However, OnePlus' popularity as a smartphone brand can be expected to bring small, yet meaningful changes that benefit not only OnePlus users, but all of the Wear OS segment in general.

For almost a decade, Samsung and Apple have predominantly been the default options if you want a smartwatch that is actually useful and goes beyond flashy features. With Samsung shifting gears and migrating from its own Tizen OS to the (relatively) more universal Wear OS platform and Google releasing its own Pixel Watch after struggling with an identity crisis in the smartwatch world, the platform has much more traction than it did a few years ago. As OnePlus carves its way into the segment, it has the opportunity to entice people who don't wish to live within Samsung's limitations when using a Galaxy Watch with another brand's phone.

Read more