Sort of, and honestly it is better than the once-a-year kind. Last.fm puts out a year-end recap, usually called Year in Music, that sums up your listening for the year. But because Last.fm counts your plays every single day, you do not have to wait for December to see any of it.
Last.fm Year in Music
At the end of the year, Last.fm rolls your scrobbles into a recap of your top artists, tracks, and albums, your total scrobble count, and how your year of listening looked. It is Last.fm's answer to Spotify Wrapped and Apple Music Replay, built from the same idea of a yearly summary.
The recap leans on data you have been building all year. Every time you play a track in a connected app, Last.fm logs it as a scrobble. Those scrobbles stack up day after day, so by December the site already has a complete picture of what you listened to, how often, and when your habits shifted. Year in Music simply packages that record into a shareable snapshot with your headline numbers front and center.
Because it is tied to your account rather than a single app, Year in Music also keeps a running archive. Reports from past years stay on your profile, so you can look back and compare one year to the next instead of losing the summary once the season passes.
The difference: it is always on
Here is the thing that sets Last.fm apart. Spotify Wrapped drops once, in December. Apple Music Replay leans on the year too. Last.fm never stops counting, so your "year so far" is available any day. Want your top artists for the last 12 months in the middle of summer? It is right there. The year-end recap is just a tidy version of numbers you can already see whenever you want.
Last.fm lets you set the window yourself. Alongside the 12-month view, you can pull your top artists and tracks for the last 7 days, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, or your entire history. That flexibility is the real advantage over a fixed annual recap: you are not stuck with one snapshot on one date, you can check any stretch of your listening whenever a question comes to mind.
It also means nothing is a surprise. With Wrapped, part of the appeal is not knowing your numbers until the reveal. With Last.fm, you can watch an artist climb your charts in real time across the year, which many listeners find more satisfying than a single December summary.
See your year any time
You do not need to wait for the recap. Our Last.fm stats viewer reads any username and shows your top artists, tracks, and albums for the last 12 months, or any range, plus a collage you can share. No login, since the data is public. If you want the full walkthrough, see how to see your Last.fm stats.
If you use Spotify or Apple Music too
Last.fm is great because it pulls all your listening into one history, no matter which app you played it in. If you want each platform's own recap as well, see does Spotify show your stats through our Spotify profile viewer, and how Apple Music Replay works through our Apple Music stats tool. Together they give you the full picture, plus the year-round Last.fm version underneath.
The reason this works is scrobbling. Once you connect Spotify, Apple Music, or another player to Last.fm, every play is sent to the same account. A song you streamed on Spotify in the morning and an album you played through Apple Music at night land in one unified timeline. That is something neither Wrapped nor Replay can do on its own, since each only counts what happened inside its own app.
So if you split your listening across services, Last.fm is the one place your full year adds up. Wrapped and Replay each show a slice, and they are fun to check, but the combined record underneath them is what gives you the complete story, on any day you care to look.
Want your Last.fm year without waiting for December? Open the free Last.fm stats viewer, type any username, and see top artists, tracks, and albums for the last 12 months or any range, plus a shareable collage. No login required, since the data is public.