Apple Music does not make your stats easy to find. There is no obvious "my listening" button, and the good numbers are spread across a few different places. Here is every way to see them, from the built-in options to the tools that fill the gaps.

The short version: Apple gives you three built-in views, each covering a different time window, and none of them is a full dashboard. Once you know where each one lives, checking your stats takes seconds. We will walk through all three, then cover when a tracker is worth adding on top.

Method 1: Apple Music Replay

Replay is the official home of your stats. It tracks your top songs, top artists, top albums, and total listening time for the year.

  1. Go to replay.music.apple.com in a browser, or open the Replay section in the Music app under Home or Listen Now.
  2. Sign in with your Apple Music Apple ID.
  3. Look through your top artists, top songs, and minutes listened.

The limit is that Replay is built around the calendar year. It is not made for "this month" or "all time," so it only takes you so far. Many people also assume Replay only appears in December, but the page is live year round and updates as you listen. If you would rather not wait for the annual recap, our guide to Apple Music Replay Anytime covers how to check it any day of the year.

Method 2: Recently played and heavy rotation

For a shorter window, Apple Music gives you two live views:

These are the closest thing to a "right now" snapshot, which is what most people actually want when they search for their stats. If you want to go deeper on this window, see how to review your full Apple Music listening history.

Method 3: A stats tracker

Third-party trackers pull your stats into one dashboard so you are not hopping between screens. The best-known one is stats.fm, and it works with Apple Music once you connect your account.

Our own Apple Music stats tool does the same job with a focus on speed and privacy. Connect through Apple's official read only sign in and you see your recently played, your heavy rotation, and a link to your Replay in one place. It is free, there is no signup, and nothing is stored on a server. If you want your recent stats without digging through the app, this is the fastest path.

The trade-off with any tracker is trust: you are handing it access to your account, so it is worth knowing how a service is built before you connect. A tool that reads your data live and keeps nothing is a very different thing from one that stores your history on its own servers.

Want your recently played, heavy rotation, and Replay together in one view? Try the free Apple Music stats tool. It uses Apple's official read-only sign in, needs no signup, and stores nothing on a server, so your stats load in seconds.

Which method should you use

Most people mix a couple of these. Replay is the big annual picture, while recently played and a tracker cover the day-to-day. There is no single screen that does it all, so the right answer depends on the window you care about.

A note on other people's stats

You can only see your own Apple Music stats. Apple hands this data to you after you sign in, and to no one else. There is no legitimate way to view a stranger's top songs, so treat any site that promises it with suspicion.

The same caution applies to the tools you do connect. Stick with services that use Apple's official sign in and request read access only, and never type your Apple ID password into a random site. For a fuller checklist, read whether are Apple Music stats apps safe before you link anything.