Can Music Actually Help You Manifest? I Tried WishTune for 30 Days
'll be honest — when I first heard the phrase "manifestation music," I rolled my eyes a little. It sounded like something you'd see between a crystal shop and a kombucha stand. But curiosity got the better of me, and after a rough few months where nothing seemed to be going my way, I figured: what's the harm in pressing play?
That was 30 days ago. And while I'm not going to sit here and tell you my bank account tripled or that I manifested a penthouse suite — I will tell you that something shifted. And that surprised me more than anything.
What is manifestation music, exactly?
WishTune describes itself as the world's first manifestation music brand. The idea is simple: beneath the actual music — party beats, sleep tracks, even shower playlists — there are layered affirmations embedded into the audio. You're not consciously listening to someone repeat "I am wealthy" at you. The affirmations work quietly, in the background, while you do whatever you're already doing.
The science behind it leans into subconscious programming — the idea that our brains are most receptive to suggestion when we're relaxed, distracted, or in that half-awake state just before sleep. Whether you buy into that fully or partially, it's hard to argue that the music itself isn't genuinely good. The Wealth Party Mixtape hits hard. The Sleep Mixtape is legitimately one of the most relaxing things I've ever put on at night.
"You don't have to believe in manifestation for this to work. You just have to press play."
What I actually tried
The Wealth Sleep Mixtape
I used this every night for three weeks. The production is surprisingly lush — ambient layers, soft rhythms, nothing jarring. I'd typically fall asleep within 15–20 minutes, which for someone who used to scroll their phone for an hour before bed, was already a win. Whether the affirmations were doing anything or not, my sleep quality noticeably improved. I woke up feeling less cluttered, more focused.
The Wealth Party Mixtape
I'll be real — I wasn't sure how to use this one at first. But I started playing it during my morning routine, while getting ready. The energy is high, the beats are genuinely fun, and there's something about starting your day in that headspace — feeling abundant before the to-do list kicks in — that quietly changed how I showed up. A couple of people told me I seemed more confident this month. I didn't tell them I'd been blasting "wealth affirmation music" while brushing my teeth.
The bigger picture: why this actually makes sense
We already know music affects mood. Studies have shown that what we listen to can influence our stress levels, productivity, focus, and emotional state. If you're going to have background music anyway — at a party, in the shower, while you drift off — why not have it be music that's intentionally designed to work in your favor?
That's really WishTune's pitch, and once you strip away the "manifestation" language that might make skeptics flinch, it's a pretty reasonable one. You're not being asked to sit and chant. You're being asked to press play on music you'd actually enjoy, and let the rest happen in the background.
Who is this actually for?
WishTune seems to be building something for people who want to invest in their mindset but don't have hours to dedicate to meditation, journaling, or therapy. The products are priced accessibly, the playlists are genuinely listenable, and the barrier to entry is essentially zero. If you're already the kind of person who thinks about personal growth, this is a very easy add-on. If you're skeptical, it's still just good music.
The brand has a patent pending on its process, which suggests there's something proprietary in how the affirmations are layered — not just a voice track over lo-fi beats. Whether that matters to you probably depends on how deep into the weeds you want to go.
Final thoughts
I didn't manifest a yacht. But I did sleep better, feel more optimistic in the mornings, and get a few unexpected compliments on my energy. I started a project I'd been putting off for months. I had a conversation I'd been avoiding. Small things — but the kind of small things that compound.
Maybe that's the music. Maybe it's placebo. Maybe it's the fact that when you tell yourself every night that abundance is coming, you start looking for it differently in the morning.













