Qobuz vs. Tidal — Real-World Impressions on Selection, Sound Quality & Musicality


Hi all,

I’ve been running both Qobuz and Tidal side-by-side recently and thought I’d share my impressions and invite discussion from folks who’ve lived with one or both of these services in high-end systems.

To set context, my typical listening is across jazz, rock, folk/classic singer-songwriter, and a fair bit of classical (orchestral and chamber). I’m running a resolv­ing front end (high-res capable DAC, quality analog chain, big neutral room) and mastering differences genuinely matter to me.

Here are my observations so far:

1) Selection & Catalog

  • Tidal: Larger overall catalog, more mainstream coverage, and includes videos & multimedia extras that can be nice on a home theater/TV app. Very few “I can’t find it at all” moments in popular to mid-tier music.
  • Qobuz: Slightly smaller overall library, but where it shines is in deeper corners — particularly classical and jazz. Qobuz seems to have more historical pressings, rarities, and some European label stuff that either isn’t on Tidal or is harder to find.
  • Overlap: Huge — most music I search for is on both. But the exceptions tend to be the kinds of things deeper listeners care about (older jazz sessions, small indie/legacy classical catalogs).

 

Question to the group: What are specific titles you find only on one service?

 

2) Sound Quality & Masters

  • Both services now offer lossless FLAC up to 24-bit/192kHz — so on paper, neither has a monopoly on high-res streaming.
  • Tidal: Historically leaned on MQA; now that it’s largely FLAC and hi-res, the playing field has narrowed. The sound is clean, full-bodied, and transparent.
  • Qobuz: Master presentation occasionally feels a touch more natural or analog-like, especially on classical and acoustic jazz. I wouldn’t call it night-and-day, but on familiar reference recordings you can hear subtle differences that make certain recordings more “alive.” Whether that’s mastering choice or delivery chain is a fair question — but in my system it’s noticeable at times.
  • MoFi and special masters: Neither service streams official MoFi or other special masters; Qobuz playlists with MoFi branding are useful for discovery but not guaranteed to be the actual MoFi master.

Question to the group: Have you found consistently better mastering quality on one service? Which genres show this most clearly?

 

3) Usability & Ecosystem

  • Tidal: The interface is clean and has good playlist sharing. App stability is generally reliable across platforms, and integrations (Roon, Audirvana) are smooth.
  • Qobuz: The UI can feel less polished depending on platform. Discovery tools and editorial are good, especially for jazz and classical (composer info, liner notes), but searching sometimes feels more clunky than Tidal’s.
  • Downloads: Qobuz has an advantage if you like to purchase and keep high-res albums as files (which is great for archival listening and integration into local libraries).

4) Real-World Listening Impressions

In casual listening (background or mixed playlists), you’ll be extremely happy with either service. In focused reference listening, the differences come down to:

  • Catalog depth for niche material
  • Mastering choices on particular recordings
  • How much you value editorial/liner info vs. sheer convenience

For instance:

  • A Tidal FLAC and a Qobuz FLAC of the same performance can feel different in tonality and microdetail; sometimes Qobuz has a version with wider dynamic swings or more natural decay in solo instruments.
  • In rock/pop, differences are smaller — far more about mastering than platform.

Where Both Make Sense

A common pattern I’ve seen and lived:

  • Use Tidal as the wide net everyday service
  • Use Qobuz as a supplement for deeper jazz/classical and specific hi-res masters

Questions for the AOG Community

  1. Do you run both services, or have you chosen one? Why?
  2. Are there specific albums where you feel Qobuz’s version is categorically superior to Tidal’s (or vice versa)?
  3. How much does interface/discovery matter compared to raw sound quality/mastering?
  4. Does anyone prefer Tidal exclusively for any of the classical repertoire?

Looking forward to actual listening impressions (not marketing talk), and any specific examples of where one service genuinely outperforms the other.

ulcerdoc

I have good reasons to avoid the whole streamer/streaming thing--insufficient  knowledge about streaming and space for new components being big ones. Due to space concerns I would pretty much be confined to using any streaming service on a desktop (new/loaded Win11Pro machine), but my reading indicates that’s seen as a bad idea.

But another reason is something I never see talked about in these conversations: I want an FM radio-like experience from the streamer, particularly for classical and jazz (the 2 genres most important to me, in that order): in other words, someone else picks/curates the content and serves it up.* 

Last time I checked this is really not available in any robust, user-friendly form from any big streamer (Qobuz would probably be my go-to for their depth in classical). Has this changed? 

*I can get this readily and for free using low bit-rate online streaming channels, but the sound only really suffices at quite low volumes. 

Deezer has been flac for over a decade. Always good clean sound with my experience. I listen to Rock from the 80's, movie  orchestra sound tracks, both off an Innuos Mini Mk II. Also have a Blusound streamer. Deezer sounds great on both.  I have been wondering if I'm paying out too much $$ compared to the other two streaming services. (Title and QObuzz)

Qobuz run by Roon. Last time I checked on Tidal vs Qobuz I could not tell a lick of difference.

It took how many posts to get to a KEY issue of paying the artists….. glad it happened 

both in 2 different systems. I don’t use either service app. In my reference system I use ROON and after careful level matching I can select and store the preferred version often but not always Qbuzz. In surf city I use the NAIM app and I typically search Qbuzz first. I find both services and the combined reach to be an extraordinary value…… and yes I have a vinyl obsession also

One nice feature if you have the top team of Qobuz, you can buy high-res (24/192) flacs cheaper than a standards (16/44) CD quality.  No DRM, immediate download.