Versions:

  • 2.43.1
  • 2.42.14
  • 2.42.13
  • 2.42.12
  • 2.42.11
  • 2.42.10
  • 2.42.9
  • 2.42.7
  • 2.42.6
  • 2.42.5
  • 2.42.4
  • 2.42.3
  • 2.42.2
  • 2.42.0
  • 2.41.0
  • 2.40.13
  • 2.40.12
  • 2.40.11
  • 2.40.10
  • 2.40.9
  • 2.40.8
  • 2.40.7
  • 2.40.6
  • 2.40.5
  • 2.40.4
  • 2.39.5
  • 2.39.4
  • 2.39.3
  • 2.39.2
  • 2.39.1
  • 2.39.0
  • 2.38.8
  • 2.38.7
  • 2.38.6
  • 2.38.5
  • 2.38.4
  • 2.38.3
  • 2.38.2
  • 2.38.1
  • 2.38.0
  • 2.37.7
  • 2.37.6
  • 2.37.5
  • 2.37.4
  • 2.37.2
  • 2.37.1
  • 2.37.0
  • 2.36.15
  • 2.36.14
  • 2.36.13
  • 2.36.12
  • 2.36.11
  • 2.36.10
  • 2.36.9
  • 2.36.8
  • 2.36.7
  • 2.36.6
  • 2.36.5
  • 2.36.4
  • 2.36.3
  • 2.36.2
  • 2.36.1
  • 2.36.0
  • 2.35.1
  • 2.35.0
  • 2.34.1
  • 2.33.2
  • 2.33.1
  • 2.33.0
  • 2.32.1
  • 2.32.0
  • 2.31.3
  • 2.31.2
  • 2.31.1
  • 2.31.0
  • 2.30.0
  • 2.29.1
  • 2.29.0
  • 2.28.1
  • 2.28.0
  • 2.27.2
  • 2.27.1
  • 2.27.0
  • 2.26.0
  • 2.25.3
  • 2.25.2
  • 2.25.1
  • 2.25.0
  • 2.24.2
  • 2.23.2
  • 2.23.1
  • 2.23.0
  • 2.22.2
  • 2.22.1
  • 2.22.0
  • 2.21.0
  • 2.20.3
  • 2.20.2
  • 2.20.1
  • 2.20.0
  • 2.19.0
  • 2.18.1
  • 2.18.0
  • 2.17.2
  • 2.17.1
  • 2.17.0
  • 2.16.2
  • 2.16.1
  • 2.16.0

Spicetify is a lightweight command-line utility whose sole purpose is to open the official Spotify desktop client to deep visual and functional customization without touching the underlying binary; by injecting user-defined CSS, JavaScript, and theme assets into Spotify’s Chromium-based interface, it lets listeners reshape the look of playlists, reposition player elements, change color schemes, hide unwanted sections, or add small enhancements such as lyric displays and extra controls. Originally created for enthusiasts who wanted a dark, minimal, or album-art-driven aesthetic, the tool has evolved into a modular platform that supports community-authored extensions, custom apps, and complete skins, making it relevant for DJs preparing clean booth interfaces, streamers seeking on-brand overlays, office users removing social features, or developers prototyping new Spotify-based workflows. The project, maintained under the Spicetify publisher name, is currently offered at version 2.43.1 and has already produced 109 successive builds, each refining compatibility with Spotify’s frequent Electron updates and expanding the theming API. Because it operates entirely on configuration files and a local CLI executable, no system-level hooks or permanent patches are required, so rollback is as simple as deleting the settings folder. The software is categorized within the “Audio Plugins / Multimedia Add-ons” segment, yet its text-driven nature also places it adjacent to developer-centric customization tools. Spicetify is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

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