You’ve probably often run into the problem of songs you don’t actually want showing up in your Spotify playlists. Maybe it’s your kid’s latest obsession or an artist you just can’t deal with. Skipping these tracks never seemed to help. Spotify’s algorithm, eager to learn from every play, would catch that brief listen and assume it was a favorite. Before long, your Discover Weekly was cluttered with more of the same tracks you were trying to avoid.
Spotify’s latest update fixes that. The company is giving users more control over how its algorithm reads their listening habits. Starting now, you can exclude individual songs from your “Taste Profile” so they won’t skew your recommendations, influence personalized playlists like Discover Weekly, or show up in Wrapped. The feature is rolling out globally across iOS, Android, desktop, and web, and it’s available to both free and Premium users.
This update builds on the music streamer‘s existing “Exclude from Taste Profile” option, which lets people block entire playlists from shaping their listening data. That was useful, but it was also heavy-handed — if you excluded a workout playlist, for example, none of the songs in it would count, even if you genuinely liked some of them. Now, Spotify is making it more precise. You can pick out one song at a time, without throwing away the whole playlist.
How to exclude songs from your Taste Profile in a few taps
The process is straightforward: tap the three-dot menu on a track or playlist, and you’ll see the option to “Exclude from your Taste Profile.” If you change your mind, you can bring the song back with the same menu. Once excluded, both past and future plays of that song will have much less impact on your algorithm.
This doesn’t mean you’ll never see or hear the song again. Exclusion just keeps it from shaping your Taste Profile, not from being playable. Spotify still has “Hide this song” and “Don’t play this” features for situations where you never want to hear a track in a playlist or block an artist altogether. But this new option is really about cleaning up the algorithm’s reading of your tastes, especially if your listening history gets thrown off by outliers — say, your kid hijacks your phone for nursery rhymes, or you get caught in a loop of seasonal tracks that you don’t want haunting your Wrapped.