The Direct Answer
No — you cannot see who views your Spotify profile. Spotify has no feature, setting, or hidden menu that reveals who has visited your profile page. This is true for free accounts, Premium accounts, and Spotify for Artists accounts alike. Profile view tracking simply does not exist anywhere in Spotify's platform.
This isn't a missing feature that Spotify is working on — it's a deliberate absence. Spotify has positioned itself as a music streaming service, not a social media platform, and profile view tracking is fundamentally a social media feature that the company has no incentive to build.
Why People Assume This Feature Exists
The confusion is completely understandable. We live in an era where most digital platforms surface social metrics aggressively. If you're wondering whether you can be seen viewing someone else's profile, the answer is the same — read our post on whether someone can see if you view their Spotify profile. Instagram shows you who viewed your Stories. LinkedIn tells you how many people visited your profile. TikTok notifies you when someone views your profile (if both parties have the feature enabled). These platforms have trained us to expect profile view data as a default feature of any social product.
Spotify does have social elements — you can follow other users, see what your friends are listening to, and share playlists. So it's natural to assume that Spotify would also tell you who's been checking out your profile. But Spotify's social layer is deliberately shallow. It exists to enhance music discovery, not to create the kind of social performance anxiety that drives engagement on platforms like Instagram.
There's also a thriving ecosystem of scam apps and websites that exploit this assumption, claiming they can reveal your Spotify profile viewers. Their existence reinforces the belief that this data must exist somewhere. It doesn't.
What Is Visible on Your Spotify Profile
While you can't see who viewed your profile, other users can see certain things when they visit your page. Understanding what's publicly visible helps clarify what "profile visibility" actually means on Spotify:
- Your display name and profile photo — visible to anyone who finds your profile
- Your public playlists — any playlist you haven't marked private shows up on your profile
- Your follower and following counts — visible publicly, along with the list of people who follow you (see how to view your Spotify followers)
- Recently played artists — only visible to your Spotify followers if you have "Share my listening activity" enabled in Settings
What's not visible to others: your listening history, your top artists or tracks, your private playlists, your saved songs, or any indication that they visited your profile.
Using Music Profile Viewer for Your Own Data
While you can't see who viewed your profile, you can get a detailed look at your own listening behavior. Music Profile Viewer connects to Spotify's official API and shows you:
- Your top artists across the last 4 weeks, 6 months, and all time
- Your top tracks with the same three time ranges
- Your recently played tracks with timestamps
- Your follower count, following count, and public playlist total
This is the Spotify data that actually exists and is accessible — your own listening patterns, not visitor data that Spotify doesn't collect.
Want to see your own Spotify profile stats? Music Profile Viewer is free — connect your Spotify account and view your top artists, top tracks, and listening history anytime. No signup required.
Why Third-Party Apps Can't Show This
The Spotify Web API — the official interface that all third-party Spotify apps must use — has no endpoint for profile view data. This means that even if a developer wanted to build a legitimate profile viewer app, they couldn't: the raw data doesn't exist in any form that's accessible through the API.
Any app that claims to show you who viewed your Spotify profile is either showing you fabricated data or harvesting your credentials under false pretenses. Both outcomes are harmful. If you've entered your Spotify password into a third-party site making this claim, change your password immediately at spotify.com/account and revoke the app's access.