Yung Miami’s “Spend Dat” Is a Summer Anthem
Some songs announce themselves as summer anthems from the first beat. Others just slip into your rotation until you realize you’ve been hitting repeat without ever really deciding to. Yung Miami’s “Spend Dat” falls into that second category, and that easy takeover is part of what makes it work so well.
The track doesn’t strain for a massive moment either. It keeps things loose, bouncy, and playfully addictive, built around a hook that gets better the more casually it plays. Even the chant-like “spend that shit” refrain feels less like a lyric you quote and more like something that starts living in your head after a few listens. Really, that’s the appeal: spend, flex, have fun, and let the night feel a little more expensive than it probably is. With its mix of money talk, nightlife energy, and get-money confidence, “Spend Dat” feels perfect for car speakers, getting-ready playlists, club bathrooms, or any setting where the goal is simply to feel good and keep things moving.
There’s confidence all over it, but the appeal comes from how breezy and unforced it feels. Yung Miami isn’t trying to turn “Spend Dat” into some heavy solo statement. She sounds like she’s having fun, and that energy carries the song. The visual, directed by Supo Supreme and creatively directed by Caresha Brownlee, leans into that same spirit with a glossy, Miami-drenched nightlife fantasy. Cameos from NeNe Leakes, Trina, Trick Daddy, and Ball Greezy only add to its hometown energy, making the whole rollout feel rooted in the world Yung Miami knows best.
Outside of traditional chart talk, the song’s momentum has been hard to miss. It has climbed Shazam’s U.S. Top 200 as listeners continue discovering it in real time, while also debuting at No. 66 on the Billboard Hot 100 for the June 6, 2026 chart. Still, the numbers almost feel secondary to how naturally “Spend Dat” has already worked its way into the season.
With Yung Miami hitting the road alongside BossMan Dlow on the Motion Party Tour this summer, the timing feels right. “Spend Dat” has the light, unserious, ridiculously replayable quality every great summer record needs. It’s not trying to overexplain itself. It’s easy, addictive, and exactly what we needed for the season.

