Tems just hit a billion streams in a single quarter. Let that sink in.
If you needed any more proof that the Afrobeats-to-the-world moment has fully, irreversibly arrived, here it is. Q1 2026 streaming data shows 20 African artists combining for north of 8 billion plays across platforms, and the top of that chart belongs entirely, decisively, to Tems.
The Lagos superstar crossed the billion-stream threshold for a single quarter, a milestone that puts her in rarefied global company, finishing at 1,023,601,460. That’s not a rounding error. She’s lapping the field by nearly 270 million streams, which tells you something important: Tems isn’t just the biggest African artist right now, she may be one of the biggest artists on earth, full stop.
Behind her, Tyla continues her remarkable ascent. The South African singer sits at 755 million, cementing her status as the continent’s breakout story of the past two years. Don’t sleep on what she’s doing. She’s crossing cultural lanes in a way few artists manage.
The veterans hold firm. Wizkid (696M), Asake (643M), and Burna Boy (641M) round out the top five in a cluster so tight it should frighten their competition. Three of the most consistent acts in modern music, each operating at peak form.
The most compelling subplot, though, might be the generation behind them. Ayra Starr (484M), Rema (454M), and Seyi Vibez (391M) aren’t chasing anyone. They’re building their own lanes. Rema in particular, fresh off years of sustained global crossover, shows no signs of slowing.
And then there’s the geography. Nigeria claims 14 of 20 spots and roughly 72% of total streams. South Africa contributes three artists in Tyla, Seether, and WizTheMc. Egypt’s Amr Diab (415M) and Sherine (270M) represent the Arab world’s enormous streaming footprint. Ghana’s Black Sherif (186M) flies the flag solo, but confidently.