Spotify’s Fitness Hub: 1,400+ Peloton Workouts for Premium—No Equipment Needed

Spotify just rolled out a new Fitness hub for Premium subscribers, bundling 1,400+ Peloton on-demand classes plus free wellness content—centered on workouts that don’t require specialist equipment.
Spotify’s newest Fitness hub quietly changes the way workout content can live inside a music app. Today, Misryoum reports that Premium subscribers can access more than 1,400 on-demand Peloton classes alongside a library of free wellness programming.
The deal focuses on movement-first sessions—strength, cardio, yoga, pilates, barre, meditation, stretching, and even outdoor run and walk.. There’s a clear product choice behind that list: most classes are designed to work without specialist equipment. lowering the friction for people who want something structured but don’t have time (or space) for gear.
Peloton bike workouts won’t be part of the catalog. but the hub still covers a wide enough range to feel like a mini training platform.. Misryoum notes that the catalog is launching in the U.S.. UK. Australia. Germany. Austria. Canada. Mexico. Sweden. and Spain. with additional countries expected later.
What Spotify’s Fitness Hub adds beyond “workout playlists”
Spotify isn’t starting from scratch—fitness has been a major theme inside the app for a while. Misryoum points to the scale behind that behavior: nearly 70% of Premium subscribers reportedly work out monthly, and there are more than 150 million fitness playlists active on the platform.
What’s different now is the move from “soundtracking a workout” to “following a guided session.” The hub includes curated content from established wellness creators such as Yoga With Kassandra, Chloe Ting, and Sweaty Studio, and it pairs that with Peloton instructor-led programming.
For Premium subscribers, the Peloton partnership content is ad-free and includes instructors including Rebecca Kennedy, Ally Love, and Rad Lopez. That detail matters for engagement—workout sessions are usually a steady rhythm, and interruptions can break focus at precisely the wrong moment.
Personalization you can feel (and use) in one tap
A standout feature is the onboarding questionnaire.. It asks what type of movement users want, how hard they want to push, and their experience level.. From there. Spotify generates a personalized starter pack. effectively turning the app into a “choose your plan” entry point instead of leaving users to browse endlessly.
Misryoum also flags practical playback design.. Classes can be watched on a TV and shifted into audio-only mode through a phone or smart speaker.. That flexibility speaks to real-life workout constraints—many people can’t look at a screen while stretching. walking. or starting a training routine at home.. Offline downloads are supported as well, which is a quiet quality-of-life upgrade for commutes and travel.
Language support is primarily in English, with select options in Spanish and German. The implication is clear: Spotify is aiming to make fitness routines scalable across regions without turning the experience into a patchwork of incomplete translations.
Why the “no specialist equipment” approach is a big deal
A fitness hub inside Spotify lives or dies on adoption, and “no specialist equipment” is a powerful unlock.. Not everyone wants a treadmill subscription, a smart bike, or dedicated weights.. By emphasizing bodyweight-friendly formats and mind-body sessions like yoga and meditation. Misryoum’s reading is that Spotify is targeting the broad middle—people who want consistency more than they want complexity.
The selection also maps well to how routines actually form. Cardio and strength help build momentum, while stretching, stretching-led recovery, and meditation support the off-days that keep users from dropping routines after the novelty fades.
There’s another strategic angle tied to product timing.. Misryoum notes the Fitness hub connects with Spotify’s AI-powered Prompted Playlist feature. where fitness and workout content rank among top use cases.. If Spotify is already using prompts to shape listening behavior for workouts. the next step is natural: turning that intelligence into guided movement.
Availability, access, and what comes next
Getting started appears straightforward: users can search for “fitness” in the app’s Search tab or use the “Browse all” menu.. Misryoum also highlights that both free and Premium subscribers can access curated playlists and wellness content from independent creators—while the Peloton class catalog is positioned as a Premium benefit.
Still, the most interesting question for users isn’t just what’s available today—it’s how the hub evolves.. Will more Peloton content be added over time, including formats beyond the current equipment-light focus?. Misryoum expects Spotify to expand the catalog as it expands availability across more countries.
And beyond Peloton, the bigger trend is how fitness is migrating into mainstream platforms. Spotify’s move suggests workouts will increasingly be delivered like content subscriptions—personalized, multi-device, and built around behavior, not hardware.
For Premium subscribers, that could mean fewer app switches before a workout starts. For Spotify, it’s a bet that “fitness moments” can become as routine as “morning playlists.”