Spotify has 290 million Premium subscribers and over 150 million fitness playlists on the platform. It already knows that 70% of its Premium users exercise monthly. The Peloton partnership, launched on 26 April 2026, is the company finally doing something deliberate with all of that.
According to Spotify, Premium subscribers now have access to over 1,400 ad-free, on-demand workout classes through a new Fitness hub, covering strength, cardio, yoga, pilates, barre, meditation and outdoor runs. The content is accessible on mobile, desktop and TV, with offline downloads and multi-device switching. An onboarding quiz personalises recommendations based on goals, intensity and experience level. Free users get curated playlists and sessions from creators like Yoga With Kassandra and Chloe Ting. Premium unlocks Peloton instructors.
This Is Not A Small Experiment
The Fitness hub is live in nine markets at launch: the US, UK, Australia, Germany, Austria, Canada, Mexico, Sweden and Spain. That is a high-impact launch, a product rollout across Spotify’s core markets, which signals that the company has made a decision about this category rather than simply testing whether it works.
The rationale is simple: music and podcasts are a saturated offering at this point. The major platforms have similar catalogues, similar price points and declining room to differentiate on audio alone. Fitness content, by contrast, is an area where engagement is high, willingness to pay is proven and the existing players, Peloton, Apple Fitness+, Nike Training Club, have fragmented audiences that a platform with 290 million Premium subscribers could absorb quickly.
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What Peloton Gets Out Of This
For Peloton, the deal is a different kind of win. The company has spent three years navigating the post-pandemic hangover that came with the collapse of its hardware boom, and the pivot toward being a content and software business rather than a bike company has been its clearest path forward. Distributing its instructor-led classes through Spotify, rather than requiring users to own a Peloton device or pay for a separate Peloton membership, removes the biggest barrier to adoption: the hardware.
A Peloton instructor on Spotify reaches an audience that would never consider buying a stationary bike. That’s a transformative expansion of the brand’s addressable market, achieved without Peloton having to build a new product or acquire new customers directly.
Peloton Just Got 290 Million New Neighbours
Anyone building something in the wellness, fitness or audio space should note that the Spotify move follows a pattern that deserves attention.
When a platform with hundreds of millions of users decides a vertical is interesting enough to move into, the market conversation shifts. Category demand is no longer in doubt and the focus shifts to whether a business can build something specific enough that a platform deal or a differentiated niche protects it.
Spotify’s Fitness hub will capture the generalist end of the market quickly and efficiently. Someone who wants a yoga class on their lunch break and already has Spotify open will use it. The opportunity for startups building in this space lies at the specialist end: the communities, the coaching relationships, the highly specific fitness methodologies and the data-driven personalisation that a generalised platform catalogue struggles to replicate. Spotify entering fitness leaves those doors open, and in some ways validates the category loudly enough to push them further.
Spotify just told 290 million people that fitness and audio belong together. The founders who already knew that now have a much bigger market to prove it in.