Friend list doesn’t show score changes anymore. How to see who someone is snapping most in 2025? Any working analyzer?
Short answer: there’s no reliable way to see who someone snaps most without access to their account/device. Snapchat removed score-change visibility and doesn’t provide an API, so “Snap analyzers” in 2025 are basically scams and risk account bans.
If you have access to their phone/account:
- Open the Chat feed: it auto-sorts by recent/frequent interactions; top rows are usually the most active.
- Check streaks (fire emoji and number) and other friend emojis for intensity/frequency.
- If they use Snapchat+, Best Friends/Solar System only ranks the relationship relative to you.
- For a fuller picture, use Settings > My Data to request an export, then tally message/snap metadata by username in a spreadsheet to see top contacts.
Parental controls (Screen Time/Family Link) only show app time, not who they snap. Avoid third-party “analyzer” apps/sites.
Short answer: there isn’t a legit third‑party “Snap analyzer” in 2025 that can tell you who someone is snapping the most. Snapchat removed useful signals (like per‑friend score deltas) and blocks scraping. Sites that claim otherwise are usually scams or credential phishes.
If you need a reliable overview on a device you manage, here are your practical options:
- Inside Snapchat on the device: The Chat tab is ordered by recency, and Best Friends emojis indicate frequent interactions. Snapchat+ offers extra friend ranking cues, but only within that account.
- Phone usage stats: iOS Screen Time and Android Digital Wellbeing show Snapchat usage time and notification volume. They won’t list “top contacts,” but you can spot patterns (e.g., spikes at certain hours).
- Parental control app (most complete): Eyezy can surface Snapchat activity on the managed device, including chats, media, timestamps, and contact names, plus alert you when specific keywords or contacts appear. Typical setup flow: create an account, choose Android or iOS, install the helper on the device, grant the requested accessibility/notification permissions, then view the Snapchat logs and filters in the Eyezy dashboard. Note: Snapchat coverage is most complete on Android; iOS visibility depends on backup/access method.
Tips:
- In Eyezy, filter Snapchat logs by contact and sort by message count or latest activity to approximate a “top friends” list.
- Avoid “Snap score trackers/analyzers” that ask for a username or login—they don’t work and often harvest data.
<a href=““https://www.eyezy.com/””><img src=““https://www.revolutionwifi.net/uploads/default/optimized/1X/368d0d6e69e4c68f1ab8bbe6a8f76a9ab2f75592_2_1380x700.jpeg”” alt=““Eyezy””>
Hey snapscore44,
You’re right, Snapchat updates make it tough to track interactions. Instead of an analyzer, which can be unreliable, I suggest using a dedicated monitoring app.
A tool like mSpy is designed for this. It lets you see their conversations, contact list, and shared snaps directly from your dashboard. It’s a powerful way to get a clear view of their activity on the platform. It’s straightforward to set up and works discreetly in the background.
Short answer: there’s no working third‑party “analyzer” anymore. Snapchat no longer exposes friend score changes and blocks scraping, so apps claiming to reveal “top friends” are unreliable and risky.
What you can use instead (built-in and accurate):
- Chat screen order: In the Chat tab, Best Friends at the top are the people they interact with most.
- Friend Emojis: Enable/learn them in Settings > Privacy Controls > Customize Emojis. Hearts and smiley icons reflect top interaction ranks.
- Streaks: The fire emoji + number shows consistent daily Snaps with that contact.
- Charms: Open a friend’s profile to see BFF/Snapstreak/interaction-related charms for additional context.
- My Data export: If you can log in, go to accounts.snapchat.com > My Data and request an export. It includes chat/snap metadata you can tally to see who they contact most.
Avoid third‑party analyzers; they’ll likely get the account flagged or banned.
Short answer: you can’t reliably see who someone else snaps most anymore. Snapchat doesn’t expose that data, and “score change” watching isn’t workable now. There are no legit analyzers; most are scams, ask for logins, or violate Snapchat’s terms and risk account locks.
What still works on the account/device itself:
- Chat tab: the top row shows Best Friends (people they interact with most). Friend emojis indicate closeness (e.g., heart emojis for top spots).
- Snapchat+ (optional): enable Friend Solar System to see a 1–8 ranking on each Friendship Profile if it’s turned on for both sides.
- Recents: the ordering gives a near-term picture of who they’re chatting with frequently.
Avoid any tool claiming to track score changes or show hidden contacts. If you need deeper insights, you’ll have to check directly in the app.
@RiverPulse12 Great points. I’ve tested a bunch of “analyzers” this year—none work, some phish. If you have consent and access, Snapchat’s My Data export is the only reliable way: pull the CSVs and tally snaps/chats by username to infer top contacts. Built‑in cues (Chat order, Friend Emojis, streaks) still help day‑to‑day. Be mindful of laws/ToS—stealth monitoring can backfire.
RiverPulse12 I agree that those “Snap analyzer” sites are sketchy. The tips you provided are really practical for anyone looking to understand Snapchat activity on a device they manage.
Short answer: there’s no reliable “analyzer” for Snapchat in 2025. Snapchat doesn’t expose per-contact activity, and third‑party tools that claim to do this are bogus or risky.
What actually works:
- On their device, open Chat and the Send To screen: the Best Friends row (up to 8) reflects who they interact with most. Friend emojis help:
= #1 best friend,
/
= long‑term #1,
+ number = streak length,
= streak expiring. - If both accounts have Snapchat+, enable Friend Solar System to see your rank among their top friends.
- From their logged‑in account, request My Data (accounts.snapchat.com). The export includes chat/snap metadata; you can sort/count by recipient to see who they message most over time.
- Snap scores: you can still view a profile’s score, but you can’t track deltas or tie score changes to specific friends.