MUSIC

Grammys 2026: Here Are All the African Winners This Year 

The GRAMMYs have placed African artists like Burna Boy, Tyla, and Ayra Starr firmly on the global stage. Discover which of the continent’s stars earned 2026 Grammy statues below. 

Ayra Starr in a promotional image for “Gimme Dat” featuring Wizkid.
Ayra Starr and Wizkid’s effortlessly catchy “Gimme Dat” makes the list of the Best African Music Performance category noms.

This article is being updated live as the 2026 Grammys winners are announced.

The Recording Academy is announcing the winners for the 68th GRAMMY Awards today, unveiling the musicians and recordings that influenced the past year. 

The 68th Annual Grammy Awards ceremony is taking place at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, with a global broadcast on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.

This year’s nominations arrived at a moment when African music has firmly entered the global conversation and is heavily informing and directing it. From Lagos to Johannesburg, Accra to Nairobi, and all the areas in between, the sound of the continent continues to influence how people dance, feel, remember, mourn, and celebrate. African artists are the moment, the center stage, the sauce, injecting global sounds with spirit and soul.

The 2026 GRAMMY Winners 

The legendary Fela Kuti  became the first winner of the weekend as he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Recording Academy at the Special Merit Awards on Saturday, January 31st. The recognition makes Fela the first African artist to ever receive a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Grammys.  Fela's children — Yeni, Kunle, Shalewa and Femi Kuti — accepted the award in their father's honor.  "I'm sure my father is smiling down on us," Yeni said in the acceptance speech,

On Sunday night, during the Awards Premiere Ceremony, Nigerian American artist Shaboozey won Best Country Duo/Group Performance for his single "Amen," alongside Jelly Roll. He talked about the current political climate in the United States during his acceptance speech saying, "immigrants literally built this country." 

The Nominees 

In the Best African Music Performance category, the nominees reflect the breadth of the continent’s sound in 2025. Burna Boy earns a spot with “Love”, while Davido and Omah Lay come in with the tender, radio-favored “With You.” Uganda’s Eddy Kenzo teams up with Mehran Matin on “Hope & Love,” while Ayra Starr and Wizkid’s effortlessly catchy “Gimme Dat” also makes the list, standing alongside Tyla's “Push 2 Start.” Angélique Kidjo returns to familiar territory with a nomination for Best Global Music Performance for “Jerusalema,” reaffirming her status as one of the continent’s most decorated and enduring cultural ambassadors. Similarly, Burna Boy extends his international streak with a nod for Best Global Music Album, making it the 11th time he's been nominated.

Nigerian-American country artist Shaboozey earns a nomination for Best Country Solo Performance with “Good News," and also appears in the Best Country Duo/Group Performance category for “Amen,” alongside Jelly Roll. In the Best Global Music Album category, two giants who have shaped the modern sound of the continent stand side by side. Burna Boy lands a nomination for No Sign of Weakness, while Senegalese maestro Youssou N’Dour, whose album Éclairer le monde (Light the World) speaks to his long-standing role as both cultural ambassador and sonic innovator.

The Recording Academy has continued to diversify and globalize its membership, incorporating more voices with lived experience across a wider array of musical cultures. As the voting body becomes more reflective of the world’s actual musical communities, the awards naturally shift as well, which makes possible an environment in which African musicians are an essential part of defining the core of the conversation. 

The 2025 GRAMMYs offered a clear illustration of this shift. Tems won the award for Best African Music Performance with “Love Me JeJe,” a recognition that reflected positively on her ongoing rise and the Academy’s increasing acknowledgment of African innovation as a contemporary cultural force. South African flautist Wouter Kellerman also earned a win in the New Age/Ambient category, the third in his career so far, proving that African musicians are excelling across genres that have historically seldom recognized them. And although some African nominees did not take home trophies in the major categories, their presence alone marked a meaningful step forward. The Grammys have come a long way, but work still needs to be done if African music is to be viewed in its fullness

The question now is how far this influence will extend and how it will continue to reshape the global landscape of sound. The Grammys affirm that the continent is firmly in the room. It’s in the sound, the style, and the pulse of the present.