Skip to main content

Wait! Don’t update your Sonos app until you read this

Music Library in the updated Sonos app for iOS.
Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

As promised, Sonos has refreshed its app for mobile devices and has launched a web app that replaces native Mac and Windows apps. But before you update your older version of the Sonos app, you may want to hang back a bit — especially if you use Sonos to play music from a personal library of digital albums and tracks.

The redesigned app feels like a breath of fresh air, with an interface that removes the bottom tabs for an all-in-one approach. The new Home screen has become a universal destination of sorts, with easy access to your preferred streaming services, a one-tap search option, and a pull-up (or pull-down) overlay that shows you all of your Sonos products at a glance. And you can rename your system, which is fun.

Recommended Videos

But one thing has been changed for the worse: The Music Library is no longer searchable, and it’s not as easy to browse at it used to be.

The Music Library is where Sonos goes to access the digital music you’ve stored on your computer or network attached storage (NAS) device. Long before the age of ubiquitous streaming services, the Music Library was the whole reason you bought a Sonos system in the first place. Even today, if you have hard-to-find or special editions of albums or tracks, the Music Library is where they live.

In previous versions of the Sonos app, the Music Library was available to browse (from the Browse tab) alongside all of your streaming music services, or you could use the search feature to discover matches from your Music Library along with any other sources you might have added to your system. In the latest app update, however, the Music Library and its contents can’t be found in either location.

Sonos web app as seen on Chrome for Mac.
Simon Cohen / Digital Trends

Instead, in both the mobile apps for iOS and Android, and the new Sonos web app, the Music Library has been reclassified as a source, which means it’s now treated as an input for Sonos devices, like line-in or TV.

Once you select the Music Library from the Your Sources menu, it can be browsed the same way you used to be able to browse it, but it remains unavailable in Search.

To make matters worse, it looks like there’s currently no way to modify your Music Library settings like library location or your indexing preferences. Previously these were accessed through the settings tab on the mobile app, or the Manage menu in the native apps for Mac/Windows.

Digital Trends reached out to Sonos for comment on this issue, and we were told, “We’re continuing to fine tune the experience of the app and will be rolling this feature out in the coming months. This revitalization of the Sonos app is our most ambitious software update yet, and aims to address what our customers have been asking us for. It’s a huge undertaking, and we are taking the time and effort to ensure all features work seamlessly and meet both our standards and the standards of our listeners.”

So clearly Sonos is looking into it, but in the meantime, if you want to preserve easier access to your personal collection of tunes, we suggest you turn auto updates off, and wait before transitioning to the newest Sonos app.

In related Sonos news, it looks like the details of the company’s much-anticipated wireless headphones have been thoroughly leaked.

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen is a contributing editor to Digital Trends' Audio/Video section, where he obsesses over the latest wireless…
What can Sonos possibly do to ‘delight’ customers again?
Phil Nickinson wearing the Sonos Ace headphones.

Sonos has had a bad summer. It hasn’t been a particularly easy few years for the upscale wireless audio company -- its stock is basically one-third of where it was in early 2021 -- but this summer has been especially brutal.

For those of us on the consumer side of things, 2024 started pretty optimistically. Sonos in November 2023 started teasing that the following year would see new products in new categories. Headphones almost certainly were one of them -- coming after years of leaks and rumors. What ultimately became the Sonos Ace were a long time coming. They turned out to be very good headphones, and an important product category for Sonos.

Read more
The Sonos Roam 2 is the sequel that doesn’t suck
The Sonos Roam 2 laying horizontal on a table.

In the wide world of consumer tech, there's one thing that's perhaps harder than constantly pushing the envelope to come up with the latest, greatest, most mind-blowing products time and time again, and that's knowing when to leave well enough alone.

In the case of the second generation of Sonos' smallest and least-expensive speaker, the $179 Sonos Roam 2 that was released at the end of May, the company has (thankfully) managed to keep its hands to itself with a sequel that's gotten a slightly refreshed look (and some new colors), a new dedicated Bluetooth button, and little else. And that's a good thing.

Read more
Denon Home Amp adds HDMI eARC, Dolby Audio to HEOS systems
Denon Home Amp seen next to a Denon turntable.

In its competition with Sonos and Bose, Denon has a new arrow in its wireless, multiroom quiver: the Denon Home Amp. It's effectively the next-gen version of the aging HEOS Amp HS2, with two important new features that keep it relevant in a modern home: an HDMI eARC input and compatibility with multichannel Dolby Audio. Plus, there's more power on tap for connected speakers with up to 125 watts per channel. You can buy the Denon Home Amp from retailers or for $799.

Denon has been slowly migrating its HEOS line of wireless multiroom speakers and components over to its new Denon Home brand, and the Home Amp is the latest device to be transitioned. It takes the guts of the $499 HEOS Amp HS2 (which Denon continues to sell) and wraps it in a new, simple-yet-sophisticated body that will blend more seamlessly with people's existing hi-fi setups. The clean lines and squarish dimensions are very reminiscent of the Sonos Amp ($699) and Bose Music Amplifier ($699), with touch controls on the front panel for preset access, play/pause, track skipping, and volume control.

Read more