Qobuz
๐ซ๐ทby Qobuz
More than 100 million tracks available for high sound quality unlimited streaming. Qobuz is also the worldwide leader in 24-Bit Hi-Res downloads.
GDPR Compliance Risk
Tidal is a US-based service subject to the CLOUD Act. EU organizations using this service risk non-compliance with GDPR data transfer requirements.
Music streaming service focused on high-fidelity audio quality, with lossless and spatial audio options for audiophiles.
Since the landmark Schrems II ruling in 2020, transferring personal data to US-based services like Tidal has become a significant legal risk for EU organizations. The US CLOUD Act gives American authorities the power to access data held by US companies, regardless of where that data is physically stored โ even if it's in an EU data center.
While the EU-US Data Privacy Framework (DPF) adopted in 2023 provides a new legal basis for transfers, privacy experts and legal scholars have raised concerns about its long-term viability. The framework could face the same fate as its predecessors (Safe Harbor and Privacy Shield), both of which were struck down by the Court of Justice of the EU.
For organizations that want to eliminate compliance risk entirely, switching to a European-based music streaming is the most straightforward solution. Below are the best GDPR-compliant alternatives to Tidal, all headquartered in Europe with data stored in EU data centers.
US authorities can access your data stored by Tidal, even if servers are located in Europe.
Non-compliant data transfers can result in fines up to 4% of annual global revenue under GDPR Article 83.
3 GDPR-compliant European alternatives available with full EU data residency.
European services with full GDPR compliance and EU data residency
by Qobuz
More than 100 million tracks available for high sound quality unlimited streaming. Qobuz is also the worldwide leader in 24-Bit Hi-Res downloads.
by Deezer
Deezer is a French music streaming service founded in 2007 in Paris by Daniel Marhely and Jonathan Benassaya. With 90+ million tracks and a catalog of podcasts and audiobooks, Deezer differentiates through its Flow feature (personalized music mix), HiFi lossless audio, and SongCatcher (music recognition). Deezer is publicly traded on Euronext Paris.
by Spotify
Spotify is the world's largest music streaming platform, founded in 2006 by Daniel Ek and Martin Lorentzon in Stockholm, Sweden. With over 640 million users and 250 million paid subscribers, it offers 100+ million tracks, podcasts, and audiobooks. Spotify is publicly traded (NYSE: SPOT) and processes EU user data in its European data centers. It's the rare case of a European company that became the global category leader.
| Service | HQ Location | GDPR Native | EU Data Centers | CLOUD Act Free | Pricing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
๐บ๐ธTidal | United States | No | Partial | No | paid |
| ๐ซ๐ทQobuz | FR | Yes | Yes | Yes | subscription |
| ๐ซ๐ทDeezer | FR | Yes | Yes | Yes | freemium |
| ๐ธ๐ชSpotify | SE | Yes | Yes | Yes | freemium |
Tidal is a US-based service operated by Block Inc.. While it may have some GDPR compliance measures, as a US company it is subject to the CLOUD Act, which allows US authorities to access data stored by US companies regardless of where the data is physically located. This creates a fundamental conflict with GDPR requirements for data protection.
The main GDPR risks include: (1) Data transfers to the US may lack adequate protection since the Schrems II ruling invalidated Privacy Shield, (2) US authorities can demand access under the CLOUD Act, (3) Your organization may face GDPR fines up to 4% of annual revenue for non-compliant data transfers, and (4) User consent may not be sufficient to legitimize transfers given the systematic access by US authorities.
The top GDPR-compliant alternatives to Tidal include Qobuz, Deezer, Spotify. These European services store your data in EU data centers and are fully subject to GDPR protections.
Most migrations involve three steps: (1) Export your data from Tidal using their data export tools, (2) Create an account with your chosen EU alternative, and (3) Import your data into the new service. We provide detailed migration guides for each alternative to make the switch as smooth as possible.
Since the Schrems II ruling (2020), EU organizations face significant legal risk when using US cloud services like Tidal. While the EU-US Data Privacy Framework (2023) provides a new legal basis, its long-term stability is uncertain. Many EU data protection authorities recommend using EU-based alternatives to avoid compliance risks entirely.
Last updated: January 29, 2026