Spotify’s New ‘Your Party of the Year(s)’ Feature Shows Your First Streamed Song, Top Artist, and More
Spotify has rolled out a new feature called “Your Party Of the Year(s)” as part of its 20th anniversary celebrations, and if you’ve been using Spotify for years, this one can get surprisingly personal.

The feature lets users revisit their entire listening history, including the first song they ever streamed, the day they joined Spotify, their most-played artist of all time, and even the total number of songs they’ve listened to over the years.
It feels a bit like Spotify Wrapped, but instead of focusing on one year, this goes through your full Spotify journey.
How to Access Spotify Your Party Of the Year(s)
Spotify has made the feature pretty easy to find on mobile devices.
Step 1: Open Spotify on Your Phone
First, update Spotify to the latest version on Android or iPhone and open the app.
Once you’re on the home screen, look for the “Your Party Of the Year(s)” banner.
Step 2: Tap the Banner
Tapping the banner opens a slideshow-style experience where Spotify starts walking you through your listening history.
The interface feels very similar to Spotify Wrapped, complete with animated cards and share options.
Step 3: Explore Your Spotify History
Inside the experience, Spotify shows:
- Your first day on Spotify
- First-ever streamed song
- Total songs listened to
- Your all-time most-streamed artist
- An all-time top songs playlist
And honestly, this is where the feature becomes fun.
For instance, my first day on Spotify turned out to be October 2, 2018. Since then, I’ve listened to around 2,447 songs on the platform.
The bigger surprise though was my first-ever streamed track: What Lovers Do by Maroon 5 and SZA. I had completely forgotten that song existed. My all-time most-streamed artist also turned out to be Yuki Hayashi, the composer behind My Hero Academia, which honestly makes perfect sense considering how much I listen to anime soundtracks while working.
That’s basically the charm of this feature. It resurfaces random parts of your music history you probably forgot years ago.
You Can Save and Share Your Results Too
Spotify also lets users save their all-time top songs playlist directly into their library.
And yes, just like Spotify Wrapped, every section comes with custom share cards that can be uploaded directly to Instagram Stories and other social platforms.
If the feature isn’t showing up inside the app yet, Spotify also has an anniversary webpage that works through mobile browsers.


Click it and Unblock the Notifications