Spotify has introduced a new update that gives listeners more control over how the platform tailors their music experience. The streaming giant now allows users to stop specific songs from influencing their “taste profile” — the system Spotify uses to understand what kind of music you like and to power recommendations such as Discover Weekly, Blend playlists, Home page suggestions, and the popular Spotify Wrapped summary at year’s end.

Previously, Spotify only offered the option to exclude entire playlists from your taste profile. That feature was handy for cases like sleep or workout playlists, where you might not want relaxing ambient music or gym tracks shaping your regular listening habits. However, it didn’t address situations where individual songs — perhaps ones you played for someone else or by accident — ended up skewing your recommendations.

Now, users can simply remove individual tracks from their listening history so that Spotify doesn’t consider them when generating recommendations. For example, parents who often play children’s songs or lullabies can prevent those from affecting their own music suggestions.

The new function is easy to use. Whether on the free or premium plan, you can open the song you want to exclude, tap the three-dot menu at the top-right corner, and choose “Exclude from your taste profile.” If you change your mind later, you can reverse the decision and re-include the track in your preferences.

Spotify’s personalized recommendations have always been one of its strongest features, helping users discover new artists that align with their tastes. However, with multiple people often using a single account — especially families, couples, or friends sharing devices — the algorithm sometimes gets confused. Smart speakers and in-car Spotify sessions have only amplified the issue, with multiple listeners influencing the same profile.

While the ability to manually exclude tracks provides a useful workaround, some listeners hope Spotify will go even further. Features like quick profile switching, voice-based user recognition, or designating listening sessions to specific family members could make personalization even more seamless.

Still, this update marks a welcome improvement for those who care about keeping their recommendations accurate. At last, parents, roommates, or anyone with shared devices can breathe a sigh of relief — no more having their Spotify Wrapped overtaken by kids’ songs, sleep tracks, or one-off playlists.

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