Spotify has marked its 20th anniversary with a special, fully personalised look at the streamer’s entire music history.
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Entitled ‘Spotify 20: Your Party of the Year(s)’, it is much like the annual ‘Wrapped’ series but for your entire music history. For the first time users will be able look back at their time on the service since they first joined, including the first day on the streamer, the total number of unique songs listened to, the first song streamed and the all-time most streamed artist.
Listeners will also receive their very own All-Time Top Songs Playlist – a collection of their top 120 tracks, complete with play counts shown, ready to save to their library.
Each data story will come with a custom share card that can be saved, sent to friends or uploaded to social platforms.
To find it, simply open the Spotify mobile app and search “Spotify 20” or “Party of the Year(s)” – or visit spotify.com/20 on your mobile device.
It comes after Spotify recently revealed the most streamed artists, songs and albums of all time on the streaming service since 2006 with Taylor Swift being the most streamed single artist of them all.

Bad Bunny’s 2022 release ‘Un Verano Sin Ti’ came out on top of the albums list, while the biggest song on Spotify of all time was The Weeknd’s ubiquitous 2020 smash ‘Blinding Lights’.
Spotify has been mired in controversy in recent times with continuing issues and complaints around artist payment while the platform has also made headlines for the investments of CEO Daniel Ek.
A number of artists have boycotted the streaming service, with Massive Attack vowing that their new material shall never be released on it. The trip-hop icons’ dispute with Spotify emerged when they revealed that they had asked their label UMG to remove their music from the platform, following reports that Ek had led a €600million (£524million) investment into Helsing, a Munich-based company creating drones and artificial intelligence for military operations.
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard also pulled their music from the streaming platform as a result, in a bid to “put pressure on these Dr. Evil tech bros to do better”, while the Sabres Of Paradise removed their music from Spotify due to its “financial ties to AI-driven weapon technologies”.
Other artists made similar moves to remove their work from Spotify, including Deerhoof, Wu Lyf, Xiu Xiu and many more.
Last September, Ek announced that he would be stepping down as CEO on January 1, 2026, with Spotify co-presidents Alex Norström and Gustav Söderström set to take his place.