Yung Miami dropped alternate versions of her track “SpendDat” on Tuesday. One of them is the faster cut her listeners had been asking for.
The City Girls rapper posted the news on X this morning. Her caption read: “Y’all wanted a fast version right?👀 I just dropped #SpendDat alternate versions!!!🙂↔️ OUT NOW EVERYWHERE! Which one hit more? $$$$”
That’s about as direct as it gets. She heard what people wanted and came through.
All versions are out now on every major streaming platform through Quality Control Music. The post pulled in over 450 likes and 60-plus retweets within hours of going up.
Dropping multiple versions of a single track has become one of the smarter moves in streaming-era music. A sped-up cut can catch a different wave entirely, landing on playlists the original might have missed. Done right, alternate versions keep a song circulating longer. Yung Miami clearly has that in mind here.
City Girls fans have been keeping up with Yung Miami’s solo moves for a few years now. She and JT – real name Jatavia Johnson – are one of hip-hop’s most entertaining duos. They broke through with “Act Up” in 2018, one of the standout rap records of that year. Their home at Quality Control Music gave both women a strong platform. Yung Miami has been using hers.
The solo version of Yung Miami is a slightly different look. The confidence is the same, but the tracks give her more room to set the tone on her own terms. Fans who’ve been paying attention to that shift have been showing up for her. This release looks like more of the same.
“SpendDat” is part of that ongoing push. The original was already out there. Now listeners get options. That’s the fun part about alternate versions – you pick the one that fits your mood. You can play both and argue about which one hits harder. It’s a small thing, but it makes listening feel like a real conversation instead of just a one-sided drop.
Yung Miami is leaning into exactly that. Asking ‘Which one hit more?’ in the caption isn’t just a fun line. She wants actual feedback, and her audience knows she means it. Her social presence has always felt personal – direct and casual, more group chat than press release.
The faster version specifically speaks to a real demand. Over the last few years, streaming audiences have gotten loud about wanting sped-up takes on songs they love. It started in niche corners of TikTok and spread. Now it’s a genuine listener expectation for some artists. Getting the fast version straight from Yung Miami is different from a fan edit floating around online. It’s official, it counts, and it has the full rollout behind it.
For anyone who’s been sleeping on “SpendDat,” today’s a good day to catch up. All the alternate versions are live right now across every platform. Yung Miami is already asking for your take. Go listen and let her know.

