Burna Boy surpasses Tyla to reclaim Africa's most-streamed artist title
Nigerian music star Burna Boy has reclaimed the title of Africa's most-streamed artist on Spotify, achieving a record 46.84 million monthly listeners on the platform. The Grammy-winning singer surpassed the previous African record of 46.58 million monthly listeners held by South African artist Tyla, according to Spotify data.
'Dai Dai' collaboration with Shakira drives streaming surge
The surge in Burna Boy's streaming numbers has been driven largely by the success of 'Dai Dai,' his collaboration with Colombian singer Shakira, which serves as the official anthem of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The song gained global attention following its performance during the tournament's opening ceremony and has continued to perform strongly across international music charts.
Impressive streaming catalogue and upcoming projects
The achievement adds to Burna Boy's already impressive streaming catalogue, led by hits including 'Last Last,' which remains one of his most successful songs on Spotify and is approaching 600 million streams. The new milestone comes ahead of the release of Burna Boy's next studio album and his planned 'Unity Tour,' scheduled to begin later this year.
Commercial success across Europe
'Dai Dai' has also enjoyed strong commercial success across Europe, reaching No. 1 in Spain, No. 2 in France, No. 3 in Italy, No. 4 in the United Kingdom, No. 5 in Switzerland and No. 8 in Germany, aided by extensive World Cup exposure and radio airplay.
Other top African artists on Spotify
Among African artists on Spotify, Burna Boy currently leads Tems, who has 40.64 million monthly listeners, while Ayra Starr and Rema also remain among the continent's most-streamed acts.
Global Spotify rankings
Globally, Spotify's all-time peak monthly listener rankings continue to be led by Bruno Mars with 133.6 million listeners, followed by Justin Bieber with 128.4 million, The Weeknd with 113.9 million, Rihanna with 110.3 million and Michael Jackson with 109.6 million.



