Taylor Swift continues to rewrite the rules of modern pop stardom—this time, by streaming her way into history. The 14-time Grammy winner has officially become the first female artist to have three albums, each surpassing 10 billion streams on Spotify. The streaming trifecta includes Lover, Folklore, and Midnights, cementing Swift’s dominance across eras, genres, and moods.
Taylor Swift Makes Streaming History with Three Albums Surpassing 10 Billion Spotify Streams

Of the three, Midnights, which was released in October 2022, achieved the milestone in a record 761 days from its lead single’s debut, making it the fastest album by a female artist to reach the 10 billion stream threshold. It’s a feat that not even streaming powerhouses like Billie Eilish or Dua Lipa have matched—both of whom have two albums in the 10B club. For Swift, this is more than a numbers game; it’s another notch in an already legendary career that blends commercial power with critical acclaim and deeply personal storytelling.
‘Reputation’ (Taylor’s Version)’ may be next to join the club as fans eye the AMA weekend for the drop

And while Swift is currently basking in this Spotify glow, the Swiftie community (which I’m a part of) is in overdrive speculating that Reputation (Taylor’s Version) may be on the brink of release. Many fans are pointing to this weekend’s American Music Awards as a potential launchpad. If it drops, it’s likely only a matter of time before Reputation (TV) becomes Swift’s fourth entry into the 10 billion club. With tracks like Look What You Made Me Do and Delicate already boasting massive individual numbers, the math checks out.
Meanwhile, behind the scenes, a seismic shift could be underway. According to Page Six, Shamrock Holdings—the investment firm that currently owns the rights to Swift’s original masters—is reportedly considering selling them back to the artist herself. The estimated price tag? Between $600 million and $1 billion. And in an unexpected twist of poetic irony, Scooter Braun—the industry heavyweight who acquired her masters during the controversial 2019 Big Machine deal—is said to be encouraging the sale.

If it happens, it would mark a full-circle moment in Swift’s fight for artist ownership—a war she’s waged publicly and passionately. In the meantime, she’s letting the stats speak for themselves. Three albums. Thirty billion streams. One unstoppable era.
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