Spotify adds Audiobook Recaps to get you up to speed

Spotify has added a tool for audiobook listeners who have a habit of forgetting what they've just heard.
Currently in beta, Audiobook Recaps is the streaming platform's latest feature, one that sounds a lot like Amazon's recently added Recaps for Kindle. Announced in a blog post on Thursday, Spotify's new tool is "designed to help listeners jump back into stories they’ve put down" by providing a short refresher on the narrative thus far.
It appears these Recaps are AI-generated, but Mashable has reached out to Spotify to clarify.
So, how do Recaps work? When you fire up an audiobook you've already been listening to, a Recap button will now appear on the page that you can tap to hear the summary. According to the company, Recaps only activate after you've listened to the first 15-20 minutes of a book, and will constantly update as you listen. Importantly, Recaps will come without spoilers for anything up ahead.
So far, Recaps are only available in Spotify's iOS apps on mobile and desktop with a selection of English language books — so if you don't see a Recap on your book, it's probably not in this range. And notably, audiobooks are currently available only to Spotify Premium subscribers in the U.S., Canada, UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, France, Belgium, Austria, Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Liechtenstein, and Luxembourg.
Featured Video For You
In its post, Spotify said it had developed audiobook recaps with its publishing partners, and Mashable has reached out to Spotify for further information on how this actually worked. Since launching audiobooks in 2022 (after acquiring audiobook platform Findaway in 2021), Spotify has inked multiple publishing deals with major and independent publishers including Bloomsbury, Penguin Random House, HarperCollins, Hachette, Blackstone Publishing, Crooked Lane, Alcove Press, and many, many more. As of 2025, Spotify has more than 500,000 English-language books in its library, triple the number it had at launch, and reported that half of Premium users have listened to at least one.
In 2024, Spotify said it has "paid hundreds of millions of dollars to publishers on an annualized basis," though the payout reportedly varies according to individual deals, as outlets like Bloomberg, Guardian, and The Bookseller, as well as the Authors Guild, have dug further into.
Overall, in its Q3 2025 earnings report, Spotify said subscribers had climbed 12 percent to a total of 281 million.
Meanwhile, the company has been adding new features like the wind of late, with Spotify adding regular Wrapped-style listening stats, managed accounts for kids, search and play abilities for free accounts, custom transitions in playlists, and finally launching that long-awaited lossless audio. But the company is also under quite a bit of heat from artists.