Spotify for Artists' editorial pitch field is 500 characters. Most artists write around 200, ramble, and forget the things editors actually look for. Fill in the form, copy the result, paste it into Spotify. Free, no signup, no email collected.
What Spotify actually reads.
The editorial pitch field is one of the most under-used 500 characters in the music industry. Editors at Spotify use it as a triage tool — there are tens of thousands of pitches every week, and the ones that get listened to first share four traits.
1. Genre and mood, stated plainly.
The system already pulls genre tags from your distributor. Use the pitch text to refine: "deep afro house with a chant vocal" reads better than "experimental sound." Editors are slotting tracks into named playlists; help them slot yours.
2. Where you're based.
Spotify's editorial team is regional. Slovenia gets pitched to a different team than Mexico City or Lagos. Putting your location in the pitch sometimes routes the track to a regional editor whose remit you fit better than the global team's.
3. One specific sonic detail.
"Live shaker through a Roland Space Echo" beats "great percussion." It signals you know the production well enough to describe it, which editors associate with a stronger record.
4. Real promotion behind it.
"€500 Meta spend, pre-save campaign live, regional press confirmed" is a signal the track has investment. Editors are pattern-matching for tracks they think will succeed — promotion is one of the strongest predictors. Don't lie about it — if you have nothing planned, say so or say nothing.
Common mistakes.
Pitching too late. Less than 7 days before release means the track almost certainly won't get reviewed in time. Spotify recommends 4 weeks. Aim for 2.
Padding to fill 500 characters. 350 well-placed characters beat 500 hedged ones. Trim adjectives.
Comparing yourself to artists 100× your size. "For fans of Bad Bunny" is fine if you're already at 1M monthly listeners. Otherwise it reads as a flag.
Listing every playlist you want to be on. One or two named targets is fine. Ten is spam.
Forgetting the language tag. If your vocals are in a non-English language, say so — Spotify has dedicated playlists per language and many artists miss that route.
Common questions
What's the character limit on a Spotify editorial pitch?
500 characters including spaces. The generator stays under this automatically and trims the lowest-priority sections first if you exceed it.
Does Spotify's editorial team actually read the pitch?
Yes — at least the first sentence and any structured fields. Pitches without context get deprioritised because they're harder to slot into an editorial playlist.
Should I mention paid promotion in my pitch?
Yes. Editors actively look for promotion as a signal that the release will perform. Be specific: "€500 Meta ad spend + pre-save campaign + 2 confirmed press features" reads stronger than "we're promoting it."
When should I submit the pitch in Spotify for Artists?
At least 7 days before release. Spotify recommends 4 weeks. Same-day pitches are essentially never reviewed — the editorial calendar locks in advance.
Does this generator submit my pitch to Spotify?
No. It writes the pitch text. You copy it and paste it into Spotify for Artists yourself. Nothing leaves this page — the generator runs entirely in your browser.
Can I use this for non-editorial pitches (e.g. independent curators)?
Yes. The generated text works for any curator pitch — Rapture, SubmitHub premium, Groover, direct emails. The 500-character cap just keeps it tight; most curators prefer concise pitches anyway.
Once you've sent the pitch — send the track to Ben.
If you make afro house or deep house, submit the same track to Rapture. €3, listened to in full, written feedback within 72 hours. Independent of any Spotify editorial decision.