Sonos’ software has historically been one of its biggest differentiators…but Amazon is leading a wave of improved AI in music appsSonos knows change is coming, but may not be able to adapt

Sonos has rightfully been credited with making great speakers, but if you take a historical survey of Sonos reviews, it’s the company’s app that has traditionally been singled out for much of the praise (note the words ‘traditionally’ and ‘historical’). Said companion app is the “face” of Sonos: a one-stop shop that combines the management of your Sonos products with access to all of your music, whether you stream from a service or your personal collection.

Sadly, and much to the chagrin of Sonos owners, in 2024, the company effectively blew up its own face – a wound caused by the release of a poorly conceived and even more poorly executed app redesign.

Today, at the tail end of 2025, most of the bugs have been squashed, users’ favorite features have returned. And while some still wrestle with stability (myself included), the Sonos app is largely usable once again – just in time for it to be threatened with obsolescence by AI.

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Amazon Music's Alexa+ app integration poster, showing a blue smartphone screen with musical notes

(Image credit: Amazon Music)

No, I’m not suggesting ChatGPT is going to replace the Sonos app (though that doesn’t seem so far-fetched, does it?). Instead, Sonos should be casting a wary eye at Amazon, Google, Apple, and even Spotify. These companies are rapidly accelerating what their existing AI assistants can do and integrating them into their respective music services.

Amazon announced that its next-gen AI assistant, Alexa+, is available within its Amazon Music app for all U.S. users on iOS and Android.

A selection of Sonos products and AI in music apps, to suggest the crossover (and rivalry)

(Image credit: Future)

This poses a double threat for Sonos. The coming of Music Intelligence (as Amazon dubs it) will make Sonos’ superb universal search seem like a relic from a bygone era, and it may prove better at managing your Sonos speakers than either the Sonos app or the company’s homegrown Sonos Voice Control assistant.

The timing couldn’t be worse: Sonos’ app redesign fiasco sent users scurrying for alternatives. Some simply ditched their Sonos gear in disgust, but those who stayed realized they could accomplish a lot right from their streaming service’s native apps. Spotify and Tidal have robust “Connect” ecosystems of speakers that their apps can control directly, a strategy that Qobuz has recently copied. iPhone users learned that AirPlay was almost as effective as the Sonos app for grouping and controlling newer Sonos speakers. Now that the streaming apps are getting smarter, some of these folks may never go back to the Sonos app.

A selection of Sonos products and AI in music apps, to suggest the crossover (and rivalry)

(Image credit: Future)

Sonos Ace headphones, a now-defunct effort at a streaming video device, and the infamous app redesign.

A selection of Sonos products and AI in music apps, to suggest the crossover (and rivalry)

(Image credit: Future)

No one wakes up in the morning and says, I want to spend some time in the Sonos app today

Tom Conrad, Sonos CEO

Sonos’ new CEO, Tom Conrad, seems to appreciate the challenges his company faces. “No one wakes up in the morning and says, I want to spend some time in the Sonos app today,” he told me three months into the job.

He’s also not blind to the rapid adoption of AI. “Casting into the future,” he told analysts during the company’s Q4 earnings call, “we see a world where live natural conversations with AI personalities are as commonplace as smartphones are today, and we believe Sonos’ expertise in Internet-connected voice-enabled personal hardware products for the home can position us as the center of these interactions.”

Does that mean Sonos will invest in SVC to turn it into an Alexa+ rival, or will the company lean into its almost decade-long strategy of supporting third-party assistants, letting its users decide which one to use?

What’s certain is that the next period will determine if Sonos remains the lead architect of its users’ experiences, or whether its audio products will simply become the appendages of AI-driven music services, like Amazon Music, differentiated only by their physical attributes, and not by the software that once defined the wireless multiroom audio category.

A selection of Sonos products and AI in music apps, to suggest the crossover (and rivalry)

(Image credit: Future)

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