by Young Thug · 2024
The song “Money On Money (feat. Future)” by Young Thug is about flaunting wealth, luxury cars, and designer goods, living extravagantly, loyalty and betrayal among friends, and casual relationships, emphasizing a lavish lifestyle and the complexities of street and personal loyalty.
This song has been Shazamed over 135,001 times. As of this writing, Money On Money (feat. Future) is ranked 46
‘Money On Money (feat. Future)’ by Young Thug is a rap song all about riches, loyalty, and the wild ride of living large. We’re going to break down what this song really says and why it’s more than just a flex about cash. ⬇️
From the very first beat, we’re pulled into a world swirling with luxury cars, endless spending, and high-stakes street life. The overall vibe is both lavish and dangerous, painting a picture of wealth that’s hard-earned and always at risk.
The chorus is where everything explodes—money on money, millions stacking up, Bentleys over Benzes, no renting, only owning. When Young Thug says, “I’m spending this shit on my bitches and my kids,” we hear both pride and bravado, a man flaunting his success but also showing who matters most. We get swept up in the celebration, but there’s a shadow: loyalty is questioned, friends can’t always be trusted, and the price of fame is steep—sometimes heartbreakingly so.
The verses unravel wild nights, coded friendships, betrayals, and the rules of survival—“These fuck niggas tellin’ for nothin’, And I gotta be the one callin’ ‘em friends.” We catch glimpses of opulence (heated pools, designer brands, pink slip cars) but also a raw edge, as the lyrics dart between lust, violence, and bitter honesty—“Coulda went fed, went broke, ugh, Trap nigga livin’ out the ocean, yeah.” The mood swings from cocky flexes to gritty truths, creating a whirlwind of unpredictability; at one moment, it’s all gold and rose, and in the next breath, it’s betrayal and regret.
Beneath the surface, the song reveals a paradox: Young Thug and Future celebrate their ascent from “the mud,” but the higher they climb, the more isolated and distrustful they become, questioning the motives of everyone around them—even those called family. There’s an unmistakable loneliness behind the stacks of cash and fast cars, a sense that real connection is elusive amid the noise and neon.
By the time the final chorus hits, we realize “Money On Money” isn’t just about flaunting riches—it’s a restless anthem for anyone who’s ever wondered if success is worth the sacrifices, or if the truest value comes from the ones who stick with us through the chaos.
Writer(s) of Money On Money (feat. Future): Wesley Tyler Glass, Dylan Taylor Cleary Krell, Navraj Goraya, Nayvadius Wilburn, Amir Esmailian, Don Toliver