Here’s something worth sitting with. “Blinding Lights” by The Weeknd has been streamed 5.354 billion times on Spotify. Not downloaded. Not purchased. Streamed. That’s a number so large it stops making sense the moment you try to visualize it.
The top 50 most-streamed songs in Spotify history are a remarkable cross-section of modern music culture, and what they reveal is both surprising and completely logical once you see it laid out. The Weeknd appears three times in the top 50. Ed Sheeran shows up four times. Bruno Mars lands four entries of his own. These aren’t flash-in-the-pan moments. These are songs that found an audience and never let go.
What’s genuinely striking is how deep the catalog runs. “Yellow” by Coldplay, released in 2000, sits at No. 15 with 3.681 billion streams. “Mr. Brightside” by The Killers, out since 2003, cracks the top 50 at No. 43. “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen, originally released in 1975, sits at No. 44 with 3.110 billion streams. Streaming didn’t just change how we consume new music. It rewrote the rules on what “old” music can do.
“Sweater Weather” by The Neighbourhood deserves its own moment here. Released in December 2012, it’s sitting at No. 3 with 4.503 billion streams. That’s a song that took years to fully explode, driven almost entirely by playlist culture and a generation of listeners who discovered it long after its release. That’s the streaming economy in its purest form.
Then there’s “Every Breath You Take” by The Police at No. 27 with 3.408 billion streams. A song from 1983. On a platform that didn’t exist until 2006. If that doesn’t tell you everything about the power of a genuinely great song, nothing will.
Top 50 Most-Streamed Songs on Spotify (April, 2026):
- “Blinding Lights” – The Weeknd – 5.354B
- “Shape of You” – Ed Sheeran – 4.847B
- “Sweater Weather” – The Neighbourhood – 4.503B
- “Starboy” – The Weeknd and Daft Punk – 4.459B
- “As It Was” – Harry Styles – 4.337B
- “Someone You Loved” – Lewis Capaldi – 4.278B
- “Sunflower” – Post Malone and Swae Lee – 4.187B
- “One Dance” – Drake with Wizkid and Kyla – 4.144B
- “Perfect” – Ed Sheeran – 3.900B
- “Stay” – The Kid Laroi with Justin Bieber – 3.847B
- “Believer” – Imagine Dragons – 3.799B
- “Heat Waves” – Glass Animals – 3.713B
- “Lovely” – Billie Eilish and Khalid – 3.709B
- “I Wanna Be Yours” – Arctic Monkeys – 3.704B
- “Yellow” – Coldplay – 3.681B
- “The Night We Met” – Lord Huron – 3.678B
- “Closer” – The Chainsmokers and Halsey – 3.665B
- “Birds of a Feather” – Billie Eilish – 3.611B
- “Riptide” – Vance Joy – 3.589B
- “Something Just Like This” – The Chainsmokers and Coldplay – 3.578B
- “Die With A Smile” – Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars – 3.570B
- “Say You Won’t Let Go” – James Arthur – 3.567B
- “Another Love” – Tom Odell – 3.502B
- “Dance Monkey” – Tones and I – 3.418B
- “Take Me To Church” – Hozier – 3.415B
- “Counting Stars” – OneRepublic – 3.409B
- “Every Breath You Take” – The Police – 3.408B
- “Photograph” – Ed Sheeran – 3.368B
- “Rockstar” – Post Malone and 21 Savage – 3.357B
- “Cruel Summer” – Taylor Swift – 3.303B
- “Señorita” – Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello – 3.285B
- “Can’t Hold Us” – Macklemore and Ryan Lewis with Ray Dalton – 3.272B
- “Viva La Vida” – Coldplay – 3.262B
- “Iris” – The Goo Goo Dolls – 3.256B
- “Watermelon Sugar” – Harry Styles – 3.249B
- “Die for You” – The Weeknd – 3.213B
- “Just the Way You Are” – Bruno Mars – 3.204B
- “Don’t Start Now” – Dua Lipa – 3.195B
- “Locked Out Of Heaven” – Bruno Mars – 3.151B
- “That’s What I Like” – Bruno Mars – 3.131B
- “Circles” – Post Malone – 3.121B
- “Love Yourself” – Justin Bieber – 3.120B
- “Mr. Brightside” – The Killers – 3.115B
- “Bohemian Rhapsody” – Queen – 3.110B
- “Lucid Dreams” – Juice WRLD – 3.103B
- “Goosebumps” – Travis Scott and Kendrick Lamar – 3.098B
- “In The End” – Linkin Park – 3.094B
- “When I Was Your Man” – Bruno Mars – 3.086B
- “Thinking Out Loud” – Ed Sheeran – 3.079B
- “Wake Me Up” – Avicii – 3.058B


