Spotify.com/us/wrapped” target=”_blank” rel=”noopener noreferrer”>Spotify Wrapped is here, and there are more surprises than ever before. It’s an active, social-ready product overhaul that cuts deeper into your listening, peppers it with playful competition and folds in albums, podcasts and audiobooks in smarter ways.
After mixed response to last year’s heavily AI-dependent experience, Spotify says it rebuilt Wrapped with clarity, community and shareability. Here’s exactly what’s new, what you can expect and how to make the most of it.
- What’s new in Wrapped 2025: features, games and stats
- Wrapped Party explained: how group recaps and awards work
- Deeper dives with Listening Archive: timelines and trends
- Fan rankings and clubs: badges, categories and status
- Design and experience: cleaner visuals and faster flow
- Global trends and standouts: Latin music and beyond
- Where to get Wrapped: how to find and share your recap
- Why Wrapped still matters: memory, identity and community

What’s new in Wrapped 2025: features, games and stats
Listening Age is the key feature here. Instead of placing a bet on your age, though, Spotify makes an educated guess about the “age” of your taste, converting the eras, genres and release years that you favor into a single number. If you spent the year bingeing bebop or ’70s soul, chances are your Listening Age looks a bit older as well.
Top Albums at last gets its due. In addition to Top Songs, Top Artists and Top Genres, Wrapped now shows what albums you returned to the most, a highly requested metric from power listeners and album-first fans.
Interactivity is woven throughout. You’ll guess your most-played track before the reveal, then watch “races” between your top artists for the No. 1 slot. Shareable cards are still at the forefront and appear to be optimized for easy posting in social apps.
Wrapped Party explained: how group recaps and awards work
Wrapped Party makes the recap into a group game. Compete with friends, family or classmates to compare listening hours and earn custom “awards” based on who tuned in the longest or explored the most new releases. Each party has its own reordering of categories, so no two sessions are alike.
You’ll be able to kick-start a party after you watch your own Wrapped or by searching for it in the app. It’s built as a light, competitive layer that promotes multiple replays and easy social posting.
Deeper dives with Listening Archive: timelines and trends
For the data-curious, Listening Archive also uncovers memorable days along with streaks throughout the year. Look for peaks, like the time of day you identified the most new artists; which days you went long with your headphones on (the most popular are Friday and Saturday evenings); or how your morning haunt contrasts with late-night binges.
Wrapped now includes podcasts and audiobooks in a more intuitive way, as well. If you toggle between music and the spoken word, you’ll find time spent, standout shows and book highlights, reflecting Spotify’s push into long-form listening.
Fan rankings and clubs: badges, categories and status
Some folks might get competitive: Listen the most and you could be Fan No. 1. Establish your rank among others for that artist, and it’s sure to spark an unhealthy bout of competition between the diehard fans. Devoted fans can finally find out whether their loopy obsessiveness translates into VIP status.

Clubs are like playing with identity. According to your tendencies, you’ll be placed into one of six categories — Club Serotonin, Cloud State, Cosmic Stereo, Full Charge, Grit Collective or Soft Hearts — and given a role in that club. It’s a personality test and a music journal combined.
Design and experience: cleaner visuals and faster flow
The visual language is defiantly retro: a predominantly black-and-white canvas with splashy color hits. It is cleaner and faster to tap through, with fewer artificially intelligent skits and more human-readable stats that readily convert into shareable moments.
Global trends and standouts: Latin music and beyond
Spotify says the top artist worldwide is Bad Bunny, fueled by the smash hit single DEBÍ TIRAR MÁS FOTOS. That syncs with larger trends: IFPI’s Global Music Report and Luminate’s end-of-year analysis have called attention to the rise of Latin music, as well as the new prevalence of non-English hits in streaming charts.
These changes are not only cultural; they are platform dynamics. As Spotify crosses more than 600 million monthly listeners around the world, regional scenes like reggaeton and Afrobeats can, potentially, reach global audiences in a matter of clicks, redrawing the complexion of year-end listener recaps that define the term “mainstream.”
Where to get Wrapped: how to find and share your recap
Launch the Spotify app and head to Home where you should see a Wrapped entry point. Alternatively, you can search “Wrapped” to get into your recap and start a Wrapped Party. If you use more than one device, the experience catches up on them once you’ve begun.
Why Wrapped still matters: memory, identity and community
Wrapped “has become a ritual because it is memory, identity and community.” It provides listeners with a coherent story about the last year, and it offers artists priceless signals about their biggest fans. Social listening firms like Talkwalker keep Wrapped consistently among the most-discussed client moments, and there’s a reason for that: Among digital campaigns, it’s one of a small number people want to share.
This version retains the magic but corrects niggling pain points with cleaner stats, album tracking and group play.
For the casual streamer, it’s a highlight reel. If you’re a power user, it’s loads of data in the sandbox. Either way, 2025’s Wrapped shows that the recap is changing along with how we listen.
