Spotify Wrapped is back, and once again it’s turning everyday listening into a shareable, personal highlight reel. The annual recap has become a cultural moment because it’s fun, fast, and surprisingly revealing. And with that popularity comes a trend: more apps and services are rolling out their own “Wrapped-style” year-in-review experiences, giving users a snapshot of what they streamed, watched, learned, scheduled, or even lifted all year long.
If you’re looking for alternatives to Spotify Wrapped (or just want even more end-of-year stats to post), here are the best platforms offering a similar recap experience in 2025.
Amazon Music: “2025 Delivered” brings stats, badges, and Alexa surprises
Amazon Music’s new 2025 Delivered recap is its freshest take yet on the year-in-review concept. It pulls together your top artists, songs, and podcasts, and adds a clever twist: Alexa delivers a special message from your favorite artist, leaning into Amazon’s voice assistant ecosystem.
You can find the feature inside the app by heading to the Library tab. This year also introduces collectible-style listener badges. Examples include Trendsetter for people who played trending albums early, and Headliner for fans who land in the top percentage of an artist’s listeners. Sharing is clearly the point, too, with festival-themed cards customized to each listener’s stats.
Before 2025 Delivered, Amazon Music offered a simpler option called My Year in Review, typically built around a playlist of 50 to 100 tracks based on your year’s listening. That playlist can still be found under Playlists or Made For You.
Apple Music: Replay evolves with Discovery, Loyalty, and Comebacks
Apple Music Replay has been around since 2019, and it remains one of the most detailed listening recap tools. It breaks down your top songs, artists, albums, genres, playlists, and stations, and it also includes play counts and total listening time. Replay’s shareable format makes it easy to post your personal stats, and the highlight reel adds an audio-visual “best of” recap of your year.
Apple Replay 2025 adds three new angles to your listening story:
Discovery highlights new artists you found this year
Loyalty shows the artists you return to year after year
Comebacks covers artists you’ve brought back into your regular rotation
Apple also experimented last year with listening streaks, spotlighting the days you listened the longest. In 2024, the service expanded Replay beyond yearly stats by introducing a monthly Replay option, letting users check their habits throughout the year.
Replay is available in the Apple Music app and online through Apple’s Replay experience. Apple Books users also get a Year in Review feature that summarizes the books and audiobooks they finished, accessible via the green Year in Review icon inside the Apple Books app.
Deezer: a themed recap plus quizzes you can share
Deezer’s My Deezer Year recap offers the essentials—top songs, favorite artists, genres, and most-played albums—wrapped in a more playful presentation. This year’s edition goes with a romantic comedy-inspired visual theme, giving the recap a light, story-like vibe.
A standout addition for 2025 is quiz creation. You can build a quiz to share with friends by choosing a favorite genre, three songs, and a top artist—then see who matches your taste best. Last year, Deezer leaned into personality-based fun too, offering options to be “roasted” or “hyped-up” based on your listening habits, along with a music taste quiz for friends and family.
SoundCloud: top fives, moods, and a “Music Doppelgänger”
SoundCloud’s 2025 recap focuses on quick, digestible highlights: your top five artists, albums, tracks, and moods, along with total listening time. It also generates a playlist of your 50 most-listened-to songs, making it easy to relive your year without hunting through likes and reposts.
One of SoundCloud’s more unique features is Music Doppelgänger. It compares who you follow and analyzes overlap to find the user whose taste matches yours most closely—essentially your closest music twin on the platform.
YouTube Music: deeper stats and an AI-powered way to ask about your year
YouTube Music Recap delivers an interactive breakdown of your top five artists, songs, moods, genres, albums, and playlists. It also includes your longest listening streak and the total minutes you spent listening across the year.
What’s new for 2025 is an AI feature called Ask Music, designed to answer questions directly about your listening patterns—like how your tastes shifted over time. To find Recap, tap your profile avatar in the top-right corner and choose Your Recap. It’s available on Android and iOS.
YouTube itself is also expanding the recap idea beyond music. The platform now offers a video viewing Recap that summarizes your most-watched content of the year, highlights favorite channels, tracks how your viewing habits evolved, and even assigns a personality type based on what you tend to watch.
Tidal: a minimalist recap with the stats that matter
Tidal keeps its year-end recap clean and simple. Instead of flashy themes, it spotlights key metrics like top artists, top tracks, and monthly listening patterns. You also get a shareable card featuring your top five artists and songs, plus a custom playlist built from your most-played tracks of the year.
To view it, open the app and check the notifications bell.
Duolingo: a language-learning Year in Review that feels like a report card (in a good way)
Wrapped-style recaps aren’t just for music. Duolingo’s Year in Review is a 10-page summary that breaks down your year of learning. It highlights total XP, longest streak, and insights into your learning style, turning daily lessons into a clear narrative of progress.
To access it, tap the blue mascot icon marked with “2025” in the bottom-left corner of the screen.
Netflix Wrapped (via Kapwing): turn viewing history into binge stats
Netflix doesn’t currently provide an official year-end recap, but a third-party tool from Kapwing can generate Netflix-style “Wrapped” insights using your viewing history. After importing your Netflix viewing data, you’ll see stats like total minutes streamed, total days spent watching, top shows and movies, your biggest binge sessions (like finishing a season in a day), and even the movie actor you watched most.
Wrapped for TikTok: a recap built from your exported data
TikTok once offered an official recap feature (back in 2020) that summarized watch counts and engagement, but it’s no longer available. That gap has inspired creator-made alternatives. One such option, built by Bennett Hollstein, lets users export their TikTok data and generate Wrapped-style insights.
The process involves requesting your TikTok data from Settings and privacy, going to Account, then Download your data, and selecting JSON (machine-readable file). After uploading that file into the tool, you can view stats like total videos watched, total watch time, and an “engagement persona” label such as Interaction Monster.
Twitch Annual Recap: stats for both viewers and streamers
Twitch offers an annual recap for people who watch streams and those who broadcast. It summarizes your most-watched creators, overall watch time, and more. Eligibility requires at least 10 hours of watching or streaming during the year, and you’ll need to log into your account to see your recap.
Reclaim: a work-life recap for your calendar habits
Reclaim, a calendar and scheduling app, takes the Wrapped concept into workplace reality. Its year-in-review includes meeting counts (internal and external), deep work hours, break time, auto-scheduled meetings, busiest month, and a work personality type—turning a packed calendar into something you can actually reflect on.
Hevy: workout stats, totals, and fun comparisons
Fitness apps are getting in on the recap trend too. Hevy’s year-in-review summarizes your workouts for the year, top exercises, total duration, total volume lifted, and completed sets. A memorable touch: it compares the weight you lifted to big, real-world objects (like airplanes), making gym progress feel extra tangible.
More Wrapped-style recaps are likely on the way
With December still underway, more services may launch their own year-end recap experiences. In past years, platforms across entertainment, fitness, social, shopping, and lifestyle have released annual wrap-ups, and the list keeps growing. The big takeaway is simple: people love seeing their year turned into a story—and they love sharing it even more.






