Stulyo

Spotify Keyword Finder

Test any niche — even specific ones like “vocal synthwave” or “festival bangers”. See its reach, difficulty and 28-day trend, from the same engine as Market Radar.

1 free search — no signup needed

The free Spotify Keyword Finder built on real playlist data

Most “Spotify keyword generator” tools hand you a list of words with nothing behind them. The Stulyo Spotify Keyword Finder is different: every keyword you test is checked against an index ofa large index of real Spotify playlists and six months of daily follower history. In one search you see how big the audience is, how hard the niche is to rank for, how fast it is growing, and a single 0–100 opportunity score — so you stop guessing and target keywords that are both in demand and winnable.

How the Spotify Keyword Finder works

  1. 1. Type a niche. Any genre, mood or multi-word niche — “lofi”, “gym phonk”, “vocal synthwave”, “festival bangers”.
  2. 2. Read the data. Potential reach (combined followers of competing playlists), difficulty (0–100, computed only from beatable playlists), and net followers gained in the last 28 days.
  3. 3. Act on the opportunity score. A 0–100 score blends reach, winnability and momentum to rank niches by how worth-it they are right now.

Why it beats a Spotify keyword generator

A generator optimises for quantity of ideas. A finder optimises for decisions. Because every metric here comes from measured playlist data — not estimates — you can tell a saturated keyword (dominated by Spotify editorial playlists you can’t beat) from a low-competition niche that is quietly gaining thousands of followers a month. That is the difference between effort that ranks and effort that doesn’t.

Want the full picture — unlimited searches, every underserved sub-niche, live trends and your own catalog’s gaps? That lives in Market Radar, and you can also read the full Spotify SEO guide to put these keywords to work.

Frequently asked questions

What is a Spotify Keyword Finder?

A Spotify keyword finder is a tool that shows which search terms — genres, moods or niches — are worth targeting in your playlist title and description. Stulyo's finder measures each keyword's real audience reach, how competitive it is, its 28-day follower growth and a 0–100 opportunity score, based on a large index of real Spotify playlists.

Is the Stulyo Spotify Keyword Finder free?

Yes. Your first search is free with no signup required. To keep researching you can start a free 7-day trial on the Starter plan (credit card required, cancel anytime). The full underserved sub-niche breakdown and the live Market Radar are part of the Pro plan.

How does the Spotify Keyword Finder work?

Type any genre, mood or niche. The tool scans Stulyo's index of competing playlists, sums their followers (your potential reach), measures how big the leading playlists are (difficulty), and tracks how many net followers the niche gained over the last 28 days. It then returns a 0–100 opportunity score so you know which niches are both winnable and growing.

What is the difference between a Spotify keyword finder and a Spotify keyword generator?

A Spotify keyword generator simply spits out word ideas with no data behind them. A keyword finder like Stulyo's validates every keyword against real playlist data — reach, competition and 28-day growth — so you target niches that actually have demand and that an independent curator can realistically rank for.

Where does the keyword data come from?

From Stulyo's proprietary index of real Spotify playlists and six months of daily follower history — not guesses or third-party estimates. Figures are shown as ranges because the index is a large representative sample, not the entirety of Spotify.

Can it find low-competition Spotify keywords?

Yes. Each result shows a difficulty score from 0 to 100, computed only from beatable (non-editorial) playlists. That lets you spot low-competition niches an independent curator can realistically climb, instead of wasting effort on saturated terms dominated by Spotify editorial playlists.

Does it work for any genre or language?

Yes. The finder is accent- and language-insensitive and works for any genre, mood or multi-word niche — for example "vocal synthwave", "festival bangers" or "mood été". If a multi-word niche returns nothing, that is an untapped niche: a first-mover opportunity.