Can’t wait for Spotify Wrapped? Here are 5 great ways to get your music stats today

iPhone smartphone screen showing Spotify Music App logo next to two AirPods
(Image credit: Shutterstock / Yalcin Sonat)

The unknown launch date of Spotify Wrapped 2025 is all I can think about right now – and while the company's recent in-app listening stats upgrade is warming me up nicely, I'm still quite impatient to get my annual music report.

If you're like me and itching for your Wrapped to drop, you're also likely thinking of ways to get an idea of how your year in music will turn out. Fortunately, there are plenty of third-party platforms you can use to view your broader stats right now.

If you aren't too happy with your results, don't worry – Spotify hasn't stopped counting your streams just yet, so you still have time to rescue your round-up before it arrives in a few weeks.

1. Stats.fm

A laptop screen showing music artists in Stats.fm

(Image credit: Stats.fm)

One of the leading third-party music stat platforms, Stats.fm has accumulated a total of almost 27 million users since it was launched in 2020. On the website, you can view your top tracks and artists as well as your most recent streams, and can filter to view your stats over the past four weeks, six months, or lifetime.

Not only does Stats.fm give you slightly deeper insights into Spotify's own listening stats tab, it doubles as a social media platform where you can add friends and view their stats any time. You also have full control over what you want others to see, and can amend your privacy settings to select what parts of your profile are visible.

If you want the complete Stats.fm experience, there's also a Plus tier that comes with zero ads, allows you to import your history and more for a one-off payment of $6 / £4.76.

2. Spotify Pie

A laptop screen showing a pie chart of music genres from Spotify Pie

(Image credit: Spotify Pie)

Spotify Pie takes me back to the early years of the 2020s, and it's still one of the most popular third-party platforms for looking at your Spotify stats all year-round. It also has a shareability element that you don't quite get with Stats.fm.

When you link your Spotify account, it gathers recent data and puts your most listened-to genres into pie chart-form, accompanied with a list of your most streamed artists – but it doesn't end there.

There's also a setting called Spotify ReceiptiPie that presents your data as if it were written on a shopping receipt. If you choose this option, it will allow you to filter between your top artists and tracks from the past four weeks, six months, or all time, in a similar way to Stats.fm.

3. Instafest

A laptop screen showing a festival listing poster make with Instafest

(Image credit: Instafest)

Like Spotify Pie, Instafest is another third-party stats service that's known for its social media friendliness, but instead presents your recent music streaming data as if it were a festival lineup.

Link your Spotify account, and then it'll give you the freedom to customize your own festival lineup based on your recent stats. Like Stats.fm and Spotify Pie, you can include artists from the past four weeks, six months, or last year, or you can even provide a link to one of your Spotify playlists and use that.

The appearance and design factor is the main selling point of Instafest, and takes it a step further than Spotify Pie by giving you the option to choose from three different styles for the final product.

4. Musicscape

A laptop screen showing a graphic made with Musicscape

(Image credit: Musicscape)

While the above services present your listening stats based on your top tracks and artists, Musicscape takes a left turn.

Instead of listing the basics, Musicscape creates a unique landscape graphic that highlights your listening moods as opposed to songs and artists. Beyond that, it also tells you how active your listening has been in the past 24 hours and what key you've listened to the most.

It's not for everyone admittedly, but it does stand out from the crowd – and (so far) isn't something we've seen in Spotify Wrapped itself.

5. Spotify listening stats

Two iPhones showing Spotify listening stats, one with top artists and one with top songs

(Image credit: Future)

Recently, Spotify launched its own listening stats in-app tab and it's the perfect warm-up for the bigger Spotify Wrapped 2025 recap rolls out.

Now available to Free and Premium users, listening stats shows your top artists and songs from the past four weeks in your homepage sidebar, with updates every 24 hours. Additionally, it will offer you new recommendations based on your listening behaviors, and new playlists based on what you’ve been listening to recently.

Spotify has also shared that each week you’ll get what it describes as a ‘special highlight’, which could be anything from a milestone, a new discovery, or a fact about your personal listening habits.

Unlike services such as Stats.fm, you won't have the option to see results from the past six months, and instead are limited to a four-week timeframe – but it's an easily accessible way to get insights to your most recent music streaming patterns. To find it, just tap your profile in the top-left corner and choose 'Listening stats'.


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Rowan Davies
Editorial Associate

Rowan is an Editorial Associate and Apprentice Writer for TechRadar. A recent addition to the news team, he is involved in generating stories for topics that spread across TechRadar's categories. His interests in audio tech and knowledge in entertainment culture help bring the latest updates in tech news to our readers. 

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