How to Check Your Spotify Stats in 6 Different Ways

How to Check Your Spotify Stats in 6 Different Ways

  • There are a variety of websites that can give you stats about your Spotify account.
  • “Stats for Spotify” will tell you your favorite tracks and artists and then generate playlists with them.
  • Other sites, like “Zodiac Affinity” and “How Bad is Your Spotify,” take a more comedic approach to analyzing your stats.

Spotify has over 300 million members, according to the company’s website. And together, those users listen to countless artists, songs, genres, and playlists each year.

If you’ve ever wanted to dive deeper into your listening habits — maybe to see which songs you listen to the most, or compare your tastes with others — there are dozens of websites you can use to check your Spotify stats. These sites range from serious to goofy, but they’ll all help you see your music fandom into a new light.

Here are a few of our favorites from across the spectrum.

How to check your Spotify stats

Stats for Spotify

Stats for Spotify is probably the most basic “stats” site you’re going to find. Log into your Spotify account and you can see your favorite artists, songs, and genres from the last month, six months, or all time.

Scroll to the bottom of your Top Tracks page, and you’ll even find a Create playlist button you can use to instantly make a playlist with all the songs on that list.

A list of top artists and top tracks, generated by Stats for Spotify.

Click on any of the artists or songs to open their page in Spotify.

Stats for Spotify



Spotify Wrapped

You probably know about this one.

Every year, Spotify releases Spotify Wrapped, a slideshow that shows you who your favorite artists, songs, and genres were over the past year. You also get a count of how much time you spent listening to Spotify, and a playlist with your top 100 songs.

You don’t need to connect anything to your Spotify account to find this. It’ll pop up in your Spotify app automatically when it gets released, so you can watch the slideshow and share it with all of your friends.

The shareable card that you can get at the end of the Spotify Wrapped story.

The shareable card that you can get at the end of the Spotify Wrapped story.

Spotify



Once some time passes, you won’t be able to find the Wrapped slideshows anymore. But you can find your Wrapped playlists from years past by logging into the Spotify website and checking these links:

Obscurify

Obscurify, like other sites, shows you your top tracks, artists, and genres. But it also gives you a rating of how “obscure” your tastes are compared to other users, along with a list of the artists and songs you listen to that no one else does.

An "Obscurity Rating" from the Spotify stats website Obscurify.

An obscurity rating and distribution graph from Obscurify.

Obscurify



Scroll down and you’ll also find a “Moods” section that measures how happy, danceable, energetic, and acoustic your tastes are — along with how that compares to other users.

And check out the very bottom of the page for some song recommendations that the algorithm thinks you’ll enjoy.

Receiptify

Receiptify is an app that checks what songs you listen to the most and prints out a “receipt” with them listed in order. You can have it list your favorite songs from the past month, six months, or from all time.

It’s a simple gimmick, but great for sharing quickly on social media.

A song receipt from the Receiptify app.

A song receipt from the Receiptify app.

Receiptify



Zodiac Affinity

Astrology isn’t for everyone. But if you’ve got your sun, moon, and rising signs memorized, check out Zodiac Affinity.

Connect to Spotify and pick your zodiac sign (your sun sign) from the drop-down menu. The site will give you five recent songs you love that match well with your sign.

The Zodiac Affinity page for Leo, showing a variety of rock songs.

The Zodiac Affinity page for Leo.

Zodiac Affinity



How Bad is Your Spotify

The “How Bad is Your Spotify” test went viral in 2020 for its AI’s snarky attitude and scorching hot takes. The site reads your favorite artists and songs, asks you a few questions, and then mercilessly taunts you. Be warned, it can get vulgar.

A screenshot from the "How Bad is Your Spotify?" quiz.


You’ll be asked some questions about what you listen to.

The Pudding



No matter how obscure your tastes are, How Bad is Your Spotify will find a stereotype you fit into. Just don’t take it too personally — it is a robot, after all.

A taste reading from the "How Bad is Your Spotify?" app.


You’ll be sorted into stereotypes based on your tastes.

The Pudding