Spotify Wrapped 2025 is out, baby. The streaming platform’s synopsis of our yearly listening habits has become a cultural staple, boosting the brand’s reach and engagement with Gen Z across social media.
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Spotify Wrapped is here, folks.
We’re sure that you’re most likely aware of Spotify’s extremely popular end-of-year round-up of listening habits and stats by now. Launched in 2016, Wrapped gives listeners an opportunity to reflect on and share their favourite artists from the past twelve months.
It’s great for users and even better for Spotify’s brand – in 2023, Wrapped generated more than 2 billion social media impressions alone.
Beginning as a humble year-end recap for personal statistics, Wrapped has since evolved to improve shareability and better optimise social media reach. Each listener is given a personalised, auto-generated visual ‘card’ of their favourite artists, minutes listened, and top albums, as well as other gimmicks like ‘listening age’ and ‘club’ badges.
Wrapped is an undeniable hit that seems to grow endlessly year-on-year. Spotify reported its highest ever engagement numbers in 2024, and many Gen Z listeners now regard Wrapped as an integral part of their end-of-year rituals. It’s as normal and routine as advent calendars, gift shopping, and cracking out the mince pies; as an elderly Gen Zer myself, I’ve shared my listening habits with friends every year since 2017.
Of course, with that success has come plenty of imitators.
Apple Music offers a ‘Replay’ feature that parallels the core aspects of Wrapped. Sony has its own ‘PlayStation Wrap-Up,’ TikTok launched ‘Year in Review,’ and even Duolingo has jumped onto the craze with its own version of personalised, annual data summaries. All these different campaigns make it obvious that every consumer-facing brand wants a bite of the engagement pie.

For one, the Wrapped format allows users to personalise and individualise their data in a fun and authentic way. Gen Z love to have a sense of identity with regards to their social media use; any opportunity to be unique they will gladly take. So much of our online behaviours are dictated by a sense of self – we love to show off and develop our personal brand. Spotify’s charts and artist lists from the past twelve months give users the opportunity to do both.
Data is also a big thing for younger generations. Having grown up in a digital world where information is readily available and easily analysed, Gen Z are used to sifting through numbers and metrics. This can be seen in other industries outside of music; we log on to Strava to track and record our exercise routines, we use dating apps to gamify the ordeal of meeting a partner, we use health information to monitor our sleep schedules, the list goes on.
Spotify Wrapped is all about streaks, rankings, listening patterns, and deep-dive statistics, so much so that it subconsciously promotes a competitive element to what is otherwise a fairly passive experience. Who listened to music the most this year? How many minutes did you stack up? Were you in the 0.01% of Taylor Swift fans? All these different elements of the Wrapped campaign push for users to cross compare, and lightly encourage listeners to strive for higher numbers next year. The Gen Z urge to do better and be more impressive is very real.
It’s also handy that Wrapped is so well suited to social media platforms like Instagram and Snapchat. Spotify originally launched the gimmick as an in-app experience only, but with the introduction of Stories on most platforms, it soon adapted to provide graphics and charts that could be posted elsewhere instantly. It’s all about brand awareness, baby (though there is some controversy over an intern who supposedly introduced the idea of sharable Wrapped data but was never credited).
Wrapped does so well because it taps into several different elements of Gen Z’s psyche, and perfectly understands the motivations behind why we share posts and content with friends. It effectively dances between corporate and personal, able to push brand awareness while retaining a sense of individuality from user to user. It’s notable that Wrapped this year has pulled away from some of the AI gibberish it spouted in 2024, perhaps evidence to suggest the company better recognises the appeal in being human, deliberate, intentional and familiar this time around.
We’ll see you back here for 2026. You’ve got a full twelve months to get your listening habits into shape to avoid an embarrassing end-of-year list. Time to brush up!
See also:
- Examining the rise of Gen Z’s global, digital rebellion
- Spending this festive season: a Gen Z dilemma
- Staying single and liking it…no, seriously
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