Drake tops daily streaming list
- Drake led a fresh Spotify daily-streaming snapshot, with 15 projects clearing 1 million streams in a day — more than any artist shown. - The biggest individual Drake album in the latest tally was *Scorpion* at 5.24 million daily streams, while Kanye West had 10 albums above 1 million. - The list matters because it shows catalog depth now rivals new-release heat — and Drake’s older albums still behave like current hits.
Spotify’s daily charts are usually about songs. One track spikes, another falls, everybody argues. But this story is about albums — and about how deep an artist’s catalog can keep printing streams years after release. In the latest snapshot making the rounds, Drake stands out because he doesn’t just have one huge album. He has 15 different projects pulling more than 1 million Spotify streams in a single day. (kworb.net) ### What’s the actual claim here? The claim is simple: Drake currently has more million-a-day albums on Spotify than anyone else visible in this dataset. On Kworb’s May 7, 2026 Spotify album page for Drake, 15 projects sit above the 1 million daily mark, including *Scorpion*, *More Life*, *Take Care* variants, *Certified Lover Boy* variants, *Nothing Was the(kworb.net)Late*, *Honestly, Nevermind*, *Thank Me Later*, *$ome $exy $ongs 4 U*, *So Far Gone*, and *Care Package*. (kworb.net) ### Why is 15 such a big number? Because one blockbuster album is normal for a superstar. Fifteen is a catalog machine. The top end is huge too — *Scorpion* was doing 5.24 million daily streams in the latest update, while *Take Care (Deluxe)* was above 4.5 million and *Certified Lover Boy* above 3.4 million. That means Drake isn’t leaning on one nostalgia favorite. He has multiple eras acting like frontline releases at the same time. (kworb.net) ### How does Kanye fit into this? Kanye West is the clearest comparison in the same conversation because his catalog is also extremely replayed. His Kworb page shows 10 projects above 1 million daily streams in the latest available update, led by *Graduation* at 5.39 million daily streams. *My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy*, *The Life of Pablo*, *Watch the (kworb.net), *ye*, and *VULTURES 1* also clear the line. That is massive — but it still trails Drake’s 15. (kworb.net) ### Is this the same as “most streamed artist”? Not exactly. Total artist streams measure the whole firehose — songs, features, catalog breadth, everything. Album count above 1 million daily is narrower. It asks a different question: how many separate projects can still command heavy repeat listening right now? Drake also happens to lead Spotify all-time art(kworb.net) his album bench is so deep. (spotifystats.com) ### Why do older albums keep winning? Because streaming turned albums into permanent playlists. A fan doesn’t have to “go back” to *Take Care* or *Nothing Was the Same* the way they once had to pull out a CD or search a download library. The project just sits there, frictionless, one tap away. If an artist has wedding songs, gym songs, breakup songs, meme songs, and late-night so(spotifystats.com)elves. Drake is especially built for that behavior. (kworb.net) ### Where does Asake come in? Asake shows the other half of the streaming economy — new-release velocity. His new album *M$NEY* is live on Spotify and arrived on May 1, 2026. The social-chart chatter around this story highlighted the project breaking into the global conversation quickly, which matters because it shows newer acts can still force their way int(kworb.net)g endurance are different games. (open.spotify.com) ### So what does this really tell us? Basically, streaming dominance is no longer just about the biggest new week. It’s about having a back catalog that behaves like infrastructure. Drake’s edge here is durability across eras — not one album, not one rollout, but a whole shelf of projects that still clear seven figures every day. (kworb.net)ping this list matters because it captures the modern superstar trick in one number: turn old albums into daily habits. Right now, nobody appears to be doing that at his scale. (kworb.net)