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Spotify Wrapped 2025: How Ghana Lived, Moved, and Listened This Year

 

 

 

 If 2025 proved anything about Ghana, it’s that Ghanaians remain some of the fiercest champions of their own sound. No one celebrates, uplifts, or protects Ghanaian music quite like Ghanaians do.

This year, listeners gravitated toward songs that echoed their identity, their pride, and the everyday rhythms of Ghanaian life. And Spotify Wrapped 2025 makes that clearer than ever: the data reflects a nation that has deliberately chosen its own sound – music that feels authentic, familiar, and unmistakably like home.

The songs that felt like us

This year’s most-streamed songs read like a national diary – and Black Sherif wrote nearly every chapter, claiming nine of the top ten spots. His music lived inside people’s routines, memories, and moods, mirroring the real-time emotions of everyday Ghanaians.

His track “Sacrifice”, the most-streamed song in Ghana, opened the year like a promise and quickly turned into a collective morning mantra. “So It Goes, Soma Obi, and Lord I’m Amazed” became companions for young Ghanaians navigating uncertainty, blending faith, hustle, and quiet hope.

These songs didn’t just chart – they reflected a nation feeling, striving, and becoming, in real time.

Spotify Wrapped 2025: How Ghana Lived, Moved, and Listened This Year
Most streamed songs

The albums that defined the mood

Black Sherif’s dominance didn’t end with singles – his albums shaped the national mood too. His latest projects, IRON BOY and The Villain I Never Was, took the top two spots on Ghana’s most-streamed albums list.

At the same time, Ghanaian listeners showed a growing love for cross-border influences. Albums like Davido’s 5ive, Omah Lay’s Boy Alone and Asake’s Work Of Art fed Ghana’s appetite for cross-cultural storytelling, sitting comfortably alongside local releases and reinforcing the country’s reputation for an open, curious listening culture.

Spotify Wrapped 2025: How Ghana Lived, Moved, and Listened This Year
Albums

The voices we listened to the most

Unsurprisingly, Black Sherif once again topped the list of most-streamed artists in Ghana, followed by Kweku Smoke, Drake, Sarkodie and Burna Boy.

But one name carried a different kind of emotional weight: Daddy Lumba. His presence among this year’s top-streamed artists felt less like nostalgia and more like collective reverence – a nationwide response to loss, memory, and legacy in the wake of his passing.

The homegrown sound Ghanaians loved loudest

Zooming in on Ghanaian artists alone, the loyalty becomes even louder. Looking at the most-streamed Ghanaian artists in Ghana, a new wave is clearly defining the future.

Names like Kweku Smoke, Olivetheboy, and Lasmid are reimagining what Ghanaian sound can be – blending tradition with experimentation, and identity with innovation.

A 60% surge in local music consumption is more than a statistic; it’s a statement of cultural pride and recognition. It shows a nation choosing to soundtrack its own story with its own creators.

Ghana’s listening story in 2025

Here are some standout moments in Ghana’s music this year:

While Ghana streamed locally, its sound also travelled. On the global stage, MOLIY topped the list of most-exported Ghanaian artists, followed by Amaarae, Black Sherif, King Promise, and Gyakie.

Black Sherif’s “Sacrifice” emerged as the most-shared song in Ghana this year, showcasing how intimately his music speaks to the everyday Ghanaian experience.

Daily streams were up by 34%, proof that music remains woven into the fabric of daily life.

Spotify Wrapped 2025: How Ghana Lived, Moved, and Listened This Year

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