


GitHub Wrapped 2025 is a free, web-based tool that transforms your GitHub activity from the past year into a personalized, shareable summary. Think of it as a "Year in Review" for developers—it pulls your public GitHub data and presents your contributions, streaks, top languages, and coding milestones in a clean, visual format. Built by developer Amit Wani, this service runs entirely in the browser and requires no installation or special permissions.
The tool generates a timeline of your GitHub activity throughout 2025, highlighting peaks in commits, pull requests, and issue closures. You can see exactly when you were most active and how your coding patterns evolved month by month.
GitHub Wrapped 2025 analyzes your public repositories to show which programming languages dominated your year and which projects received the most attention. This gives you a clear snapshot of your technical focus areas.
At the end of the process, you receive a compact, visually styled card that summarizes your top stats. This card is designed for easy sharing on social media, portfolios, or team channels—no extra editing required.
The service is offered at no cost, sustained entirely by voluntary contributions from users. This keeps the tool accessible to everyone while covering server and API costs.
"Your Year in Code 2025 — built by a developer, for developers, and kept free by the community."
Unlike many annual recap tools that lock premium features behind paywalls or require extensive permissions, GitHub Wrapped 2025 stays simple and transparent. It uses only public GitHub data, so there's no need to grant write access or share private repository information. The entire experience is lightweight, fast, and focused on one thing: giving you a clean, honest look at your year in code without any upsells or complexity.
You use GitHub regularly and want a quick, no-fuss way to reflect on your 2025 contributions. It's especially useful if you're active in open source, maintain your own projects, or simply enjoy seeing your coding habits visualized. Since it's free and requires no sign-up beyond GitHub login, there's no risk in trying it. Just keep in mind that the tool relies on public data only—private repository activity won't appear in your summary.
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