Short answer: yes. But Spotify won't help you do it.
There's no export button for liked songs. No way to bulk-select them. No official transfer tool. If you search Spotify's support pages, the closest you'll find is a suggestion to recreate your playlists manually. Liked songs don't even get that much.
So if you're switching to a new Spotify account and you've got 500, 2,000, or 10,000 liked songs, you're looking at one of two options: do it by hand, or use a tool that does it for you.
Why people need to move liked songs
Liked songs are usually the biggest part of someone's Spotify library. They're also the part people care about most, because they feed everything. Your Daily Mixes, your Release Radar, your year-end Wrapped stats - all of it comes from what you've hearted over the years.
And yet when you need a new account, liked songs are the hardest thing to bring with you.
Maybe you got banned without warning. Maybe you switched countries and can't keep your old account. Maybe the family plan ended, or you just want a fresh start with a new email without losing years of saved music.
Liked songs are always the first thing people ask about.
The manual method (and why nobody finishes)
Here's what the manual process looks like: open your old account, scroll through your liked songs, find each one on your new account, and heart it again.
For 50 songs, that's annoying. For 500, that's an entire day. For 2,000+, most people quit before they're halfway through.
There's also no way to preserve the order. Spotify sorts liked songs by the date you saved them, newest first. If you manually re-heart them on a new account, they all show the same save date. Your carefully accumulated collection becomes a flat, unordered pile.
Some people try third-party playlist tools, but most of those only handle playlists. Liked songs aren't a playlist - they're a separate part of your library, and most transfer tools ignore them entirely.
How to actually transfer liked songs
Tuneferry treats liked songs the same as playlists - not an afterthought. Connect your old account and your new account, select liked songs (along with anything else you want to move), and transfer. The whole thing runs in your browser. Your data doesn't go through any server.
The process takes a few minutes depending on how many songs you have. A library with 3,000 liked songs typically finishes in about 5 minutes.
If you care about the order your songs were saved in, there's a precise mode that preserves the original sequence. It takes a bit longer but keeps everything exactly as it was.
What about the rest of your library?
Liked songs are usually the priority, but they're not the only thing you'd lose on a new account. You probably also have playlists, followed artists, saved albums, and podcast subscriptions.
Tuneferry transfers all of those too. You pick what to move and leave behind whatever you don't need.
| Manual | Tuneferry | |
|---|---|---|
| Liked songs | No practical method | Transferred in bulk |
| Song order | Lost | Preserved (precise mode) |
| Playlists | Hours of rebuilding | Transferred with track order |
| Artists | One by one | All at once |
| Albums | One by one | All at once |
| Time | Days | Minutes |
Common questions
How many liked songs can Tuneferry transfer? There's no hard limit. We've seen libraries with 15,000+ liked songs transfer without issue. Larger libraries just take a few extra minutes.
Will my Daily Mix and Discover Weekly update? Those are based on your listening history, which can't be transferred (Spotify limitation). But once you start listening on your new account with all your liked songs in place, the algorithm picks up quickly.
Is it safe? Everything runs in your browser. No data is stored on any server. You authenticate directly with Spotify.
What does it cost? $6.99 for 30 days of access. You can transfer one playlist free to try it first.
Move your liked songs
If you've been putting off switching accounts because of your liked songs, tuneferry.com moves them in minutes. Connect both accounts, pick what to transfer, and you're done.