Skip to main content

Android users are about to lose a handy Sonos feature

An Android phone with the Sonos app showing the music sources tab menu, next to a Sonos Roam wireless speaker.
Simon Cohen / Digital Trends

Sonos customers who use Android devices to control their wireless speakers are about to lose the ability to play music files that are stored locally on their phones or tablets. As spotted by The Verge, Sonos recently (and quietly) announced that as of May 23, 2023, the Sonos app for Android will no longer give you the On this Mobile Device option in the app’s Music Sources tab.

Apple users already know what this is like. The same feature was removed from iOS and iPadOS versions of the Sonos app several years ago. The difference, though, is that as Apple user owns a newish Sonos speaker (basically any product released since the Sonos One) they have the option to stream any content from their phones to their Sonos gear over AirPlay 2, a lossless, 16-bit wireless protocol that’s supported on tons of Sonos products.

Android users aren’t as lucky. After May 23, their choice will be to use Bluetooth (but that only works on Sonos Roam, Sonos Move, and the Era 100 and 300) or they can put their phone’s music library on a network-attached storage (NAS) device. If you don’t own a NAS drive, you could use a Mac or PC instead, but these would need to be left on 24/7 in order to access the content. A Plex Media Server will also work.

If you have a Sonos product with a line-in port (and you actually have a headphone jack on your phone), that is a third option. Finally, if you don’t mind paying to access music you already own, you can upload your tunes to one of several streaming music services that have this ability (and which Sonos supports), including Apple Music, YouTube Music, and Deezer.

Even if you’re fortunate enough to have a Bluetooth-capable Sonos device, Sonos’ lack of high-quality Bluetooth codecs means you won’t be getting an equivalent level of sound quality to streaming a track directly from Apple Music or Amazon Music. Sonos devices do not support Chromecast audio, which would be the perfect alternative. In fact, Chromecast support would once again give Android devices the edge over Apple products, because Chromecast can handle 24-bit hi-res audio, while AirPlay 2 is limited to 16-bit, CD quality.

Don’t hold your breath for Chromecast support. Sonos and Google have spent a lot of time in court together over the past few years, which doesn’t bode well for any new cooperative efforts between the two companies. It’s notable that the Sonos Era 100 and Era 300 are the first Sonos smart speakers that aren’t currently compatible with Google Assistant, although Sonos claims this has to do with Google’s new, stricter technical requirements, not the result of any legal cases.

Editors' Recommendations

Simon Cohen
Contributing Editor, A/V
Simon Cohen covers a variety of consumer technologies, but has a special interest in audio and video products, like…
Why Sonos Era 300 buyers should switch to Amazon Music
Sonos Era 300.

If you’re thinking of buying the new Sonos Era 300 — the company’s first smart speaker designed specifically for spatial audio with Dolby Atmos Music — and you’re not currently an Amazon Music subscriber, listen up: you definitely need to consider switching from whatever music streaming service you’re currently using.

Don’t worry, I’m not getting a kickback from Jeff Bezos for saying that. It’s a simple matter of compatibility and audio quality. And, unfortunately for services like Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, and Tidal, none of those services can provide a speaker like the Era 300 with the same level of support as Amazon Music. At least, not for the immediate future.

Read more
Sonos has always been expensive — but that doesn’t mean it’s overpriced
Sonos Era 300 and Era 100 side by side.

It's been a long while since we saw a proper refresh of Sonos' wireless speakers. Not new soundbars. Not something portable. We're talking about the bread-and-butter of what made the company so popular in the first place. Wireless speakers that are simple to set up and play damned near anything you want.

And it just so happens we've got two new speakers on the way. The Sonos Era 100 and Sonos Era 300 effectively replace the aging Sonos One (released in October 2017, refreshed in 2019, and still available while supplies last) and the already-defunct Sonos Play:3, which was discontinued way back in 2018 after a seven-year run.

Read more
Bluetooth on Sonos’ new Era speakers isn’t what you think – it’s better
Sonos Era 300 close-up of Bluetooth button.

When Sonos recently debuted its two newest wireless speakers -- the Era 100 and Era 300 -- it broke with years of precedence by adding Bluetooth, a connection option that has never been offered on the company’s non-portable speakers. At the time, I thought Bluetooth on an Era speaker worked the same way as it does on the Sonos Move. I was wrong.

It turns out, the Era speakers use Bluetooth in tandem with their Wi-Fi connections, as opposed to the Move, which treats Bluetooth as a completely separate mode. That has some profound implications for what you can do with one of the new Era speakers within a Sonos system, as well as a few caveats about what you can’t do.

Read more