Spotify is the world’s largest music streaming service, yet it has infamously lagged behind the competition in audio quality. It only rolled out lossless audio tracks to subscribers this past September, years after its rivals such as Apple Music, Tidal, Amazon Music, Qobuz and Deezer. (Although it did roll them out at no extra cost, which was nice.)
This is part of the reason why Spotify’s latest new feature was so surprising. It’s designed for audiophiles who take desktop hi-fi very seriously.
Desktop hi-fi, Exclusive mode

With very little fanfare, Spotify has introduced “Exclusive mode,” which lets the service take full control of your desktop’s audio processing to deliver music exactly as it was recorded with bit-perfect playback up to 24-bit/44.1 kHz FLAC.
Spotify claims that Exclusive mode is “ideal for listeners with external audio equipment (like a DAC or audio interface) who want the purest possible sound.”
If Exclusive mode is not turned on, which it isn’t for you as the feature just rolled out, there’s a chance that your computer alters the audio (by resampling it, mixing other system sounds in, or changing the volume) before it reaches your DAC.


