Tokischa
Tokischa Altagracia Peralta Juárez (born March 17, 1996), known mononymously as Tokischa, is a Dominican rapper and singer-songwriter specializing in dembow, trap, and reggaetón with lyrics centered on explicit sexual themes, drug use, and queer expression.[1] Born and raised in the working-class Los Frailes neighborhood of Santo Domingo Este, she emerged from humble origins, initially working as an assistant to photographer Raymi Paulus before independently releasing music starting around 2018.[2][3] Tokischa gained international attention through collaborations such as "Linda" with Rosalía in 2021 and "Perro Negro" with J Balvin, which highlighted her raw, unfiltered style but also drew criticism for promoting degrading imagery and machismo in urban music.[4][5] Her work often provokes backlash in the conservative Dominican context for its overt celebration of female sexual agency and non-normative identities, positioning her as a polarizing figure who disrupts traditional gender roles in Latin urban genres.[6][7] In 2024, she signed a global publishing deal with Warner Chappell Music, marking a commercial milestone amid ongoing debates over her boundary-pushing content.[8]
Early life
Upbringing and family background
Tokischa Altagracia Peralta was born on March 17, 1996, in the Dominican Republic, with her early years spent in a humble, working-class environment.[2] She was raised primarily in Los Frailes, a low-income neighborhood in Santo Domingo Este, after her family relocated there during her childhood.[9][1] Her parents separated when she was young, and she lived with her mother until approximately age three, at which point her mother emigrated to the United States seeking better economic prospects through manual labor.[9][1] Following this, Tokischa moved between relatives, including time with her grandmother in the nearby Los Mina neighborhood, experiencing an itinerant and unstable upbringing amid familial absences.[9] Her father, described in interviews as a street-oriented figure prone to legal troubles, was in and out of jail during her formative years, contributing to the household's challenges.[10] Despite the physical separation, Tokischa maintained regular communication with her mother via phone, who remained a key source of emotional support and later became her primary advocate.[11][12] The family's socioeconomic struggles reflected broader realities in Dominican urban communities, shaping her resilience amid limited resources and parental instability.[9]Initial exposure to music and arts
Tokischa Altagracia Peralta Juárez, born on March 17, 1996, in the Los Frailes neighborhood of Santo Domingo, grew up immersed in Dominican and Caribbean musical traditions, including merengue, bachata, and the emerging dembow genre.[13][14] In her early years, she listened to Latin boleros, while the rise of dembow and reggaeton in the early 2000s introduced rebellious elements with explicit lyrics that she consumed secretly, against parental expectations.[12] As a child, she expressed creativity through drawing, writing poetry and stories, and improvising performances in front of a mirror, fostering an innate interest in artistic self-expression.[14] Tokischa pursued formal studies in fine arts and dramatic arts, alongside participation in theater productions, dance classes, and modeling from her teenage years, activities she later credited with building her performative skills and artistic foundation.[14][2] Her early musical explorations extended beyond local rhythms to international rock influences, such as Pink Floyd, which she likened to the raw energy she sought in trap beats as a modern parallel, reflecting a blend of Dominican street sounds with global genres from adolescence.[13][14] Her mother's encouragement of individuality and exposure to broader cultural elements further nurtured this eclectic artistic curiosity.[13]Career
Early releases and local breakthrough (2017–2020)
Tokischa signed a recording contract with the Dominican label Paulus Music in 2018 and released her debut single, "Pícala" featuring Tivi Gunz, on July 10, 2018. The track blended trap elements with dembow rhythms and featured provocative lyrics centered on sexual empowerment, garnering over one million streams within its first week and establishing her presence in the Dominican urban music underground.[15][16] Throughout 2019, Tokischa continued issuing independent tracks and collaborations within Paulus Music's roster, honing her raw, freestyle-driven style influenced by local dembow and trap scenes, though specific singles from this year remained niche compared to her later output. Her momentum accelerated in 2020 with releases like "Perra," a collaboration with Chucky73, Químico Ultra Mega, El Jincho, and El Experimento issued on July 10, 2020, which amplified her visibility through its unfiltered exploration of street culture and sensuality. Later that year, "Desacato Escolar" in October and "El Rey De La Popola" with Rochy RD on December 7 further propelled her local breakthrough, as these songs dominated Dominican airplay and social media, drawing crowds to her performances and positioning her as a bold voice in the country's male-dominated urbano genre.[17][18] These early efforts, produced under Paulus Music's guidance, emphasized Tokischa's unapologetic persona and sonic experimentation, leading to sold-out regional shows by late 2020 and laying the groundwork for wider recognition, even amid pushback from conservative sectors in the Dominican Republic over her explicit themes.[2]International collaborations and mainstream rise (2021–2024)
In 2021, Tokischa expanded her reach internationally through high-profile collaborations that introduced her dembow-infused style to broader Latin music audiences. On September 1, she released "Linda," a track blending Dominican rhythms with flamenco elements, featuring Spanish artist Rosalía; the song's music video, directed by Raymi Paulus, depicted provocative imagery that amplified its viral spread.[19][20] Eight days later, on September 9, she partnered with Colombian reggaeton star J Balvin for "Perra," a dembow track emphasizing explicit themes of female empowerment and sensuality, which marked her entry into mainstream reggaeton circuits.[21] These releases signified her commercial breakout, shifting from local Dominican buzz to global streaming platforms.[22] Building on this momentum in 2022, Tokischa featured on Rosalía's "LA COMBI VERSACE" from the album Motomami, released March 17, integrating her raw urban edge into a trap-influenced production that peaked on international charts.[23] Later that year, on August 19, she collaborated with Puerto Rican rappers Anuel AA and Ñengo Flow on "Delincuente," a gritty urban anthem that further solidified her presence in the reggaeton and trap scenes, garnering millions of streams and views.[24] These partnerships with established Latin artists elevated her visibility, leading to performances and features in major media outlets.[13] By 2023 and 2024, Tokischa's international profile continued to grow with diverse genre crossovers. In September 2024, she teamed with Venezuelan producer Arca for "Chama," an experimental electronic track that fused her provocative lyricism with avant-garde production, appealing to alternative music listeners.[25] That December 17, she released "De Maravisha" featuring Argentine singer Nathy Peluso, a high-energy single with a music video highlighting their shared bold aesthetics.[26] These efforts, alongside earlier hits, positioned Tokischa as a key figure in the global Latin urban wave, with collaborations spanning reggaeton, flamenco fusion, and electronic music, though her explicit content often sparked debate in conservative markets.[13]Recent projects and debut album (2025 onward)
In June 2025, Tokischa released the double single "Miami" and "Celos" as Track 4 + Track 14, marking an evolution in her sound with trap-influenced beats and introspective lyrics exploring jealousy and urban nightlife, positioned as precursors to her forthcoming debut album.[13][27] These tracks departed from her earlier dembow-heavy style, incorporating rock elements she discussed in interviews as a deliberate shift to express personal vulnerability.[13] On August 28, 2025, she collaborated with La Mas Doll on "MUXAXA," a high-energy urban track blending reggaeton rhythms with explicit, playful bravado, released via major streaming platforms and accompanied by an official music video emphasizing bold visuals and Dominican street aesthetics.[28] This single built anticipation for her full-length project, aligning with her pattern of teasing album content through features and remixes. Tokischa's debut studio album, titled A&D, was anticipated for mid-October 2025, described by the artist as an outlet to "let it all out" without conforming to expectations, potentially incorporating rock influences alongside her urban roots.[13][29] As of late October, the album remained unreleased, though promotional efforts included her appearance at Billboard Latin Music Week on October 22, 2025, where she discussed artistic growth with reggaeton pioneer Ivy Queen.[30] Earlier singles like the December 2024 "De Maravisha" featuring Nathy Peluso had signaled the album's direction, focusing on emotional depth amid her signature provocation.[26] A remix single, "Tokischa RMX" with J Castle, Hades66, and Ñengo Flow, followed in early October 2025, further extending her collaborative momentum.Artistry
Musical style and influences
Tokischa's music primarily draws from Dominican dembow, Latin trap, reggaeton, and hip-hop, characterized by fast-paced rhythms, heavy basslines, and explicit, slang-heavy lyrics that celebrate sexual liberation and street life.[2][9] Her vocal delivery features a distinctive raspy, high-pitched tone with commanding freestyles, often blending rapping with melodic moans to convey provocation and hedonism.[9] This style emerged from the Dominican urban scene, where she fuses Caribbean dancehall elements with trap's gritty edge, as evident in early tracks like "Tukuntazo," which layers dembow beats under boasts of bisexuality and carnal excess.[9][2] Her influences root in Caribbean genres such as dembow, merengue, and bachata, which she encountered growing up in Santo Domingo, providing the rhythmic foundation for her high-energy flows.[2] However, Tokischa has cited rock music as a core passion, stating that she gravitated toward trap early on because "it was the closest thing to rock," influencing her raw, rebellious vocal edge and aesthetic, including spiked rocker visuals.[13] This rock affinity shapes her evolving sound, seen in her 2025 debut album's incorporation of alternative rock and electro-pop elements alongside traditional urban beats, marking a shift toward narrative-driven experimentation.[13] Specific artists informing her approach include Mexican singer Gloria Trevi, whose bold, freedom-seeking performances inspired Tokischa's unapologetic freestyling and thematic intensity, and rapper Nicki Minaj, whose confident, braggadocious lyricism bolstered her provocative delivery in trap and dembow fusions.[31] Early career nods to local DJs like Scuff further grounded her in Dominican underground sounds, prioritizing street authenticity over polished mainstream norms.[13] Through collaborations with figures like Rosalía and J Balvin, she has expanded these influences into global Latin urban hybrids, maintaining a versatile output that defies genre constraints.[2]Lyrical content and thematic focus
Tokischa's lyrics prominently feature explicit depictions of sexual acts, employing Dominican slang and dembow rhythms to convey raw hedonism and bodily autonomy. Tracks like "Delincuente" (2022), featuring Anuel AA and Ñengo Flow, include graphic references to oral sex, penetrative positions, and undressing, such as lines translated as "Take off your Jordans, take off your pants / Come, I'm waiting for you with no panties on" and "Who breaks my ass in doggy after sucking me off."[32] This approach extends to celebrations of group encounters and fluid sexuality, as in "Tukuntazo" (2020), where she brags about sharing partners with her boyfriend.[9] Central themes revolve around sexual liberation, queer desire, and party excess, often subverting conservative Dominican cultural norms through unfiltered slang that evokes euphoria and defiance. In "Perra" (2022) with J Balvin, she declares "Yo soy una perra en calor" ("I'm a bitch in heat"), framing the song as a satirical anthem for female sexual agency amid male-dominated reggaeton traditions.[7] Similarly, "Linda" (2021) with Rosalía explores bisexuality and female pleasure, while "Yo No Me Voy Acostar" references drug use like molly alongside girlfriend kisses, blending intoxication with relational fluidity.[9][1] Drugs and nightlife appear as enhancers of abandon, rooted in her barrio experiences rather than abstraction.[1] Her content positions explicitness as resistance against patriarchal censorship, empowering women to claim space in genres historically controlled by men. Tokischa has stated, "Not being afraid to express my sexuality, my way of thinking — it’s a beautiful thing," emphasizing authenticity over conformity in a context where such lyrics provoke backlash for eroding family values.[9][7] This thematic focus draws from street-level realism, amplifying marginalized voices on queerness and desire while challenging taboos in Dominican society.[1]Controversies
Backlash over explicit themes and cultural norms
Tokischa's lyrics, which frequently depict raw experiences with sex, drug use, prostitution, and queer sexuality, have provoked significant backlash in the Dominican Republic, where conservative Catholic values predominate and emphasize traditional family structures and moral restraint. Religious leaders and conservative groups have accused her of promoting immorality and degrading cultural standards, viewing her unfiltered portrayals as a direct assault on societal decency. For instance, her music has been criticized by the Catholic Church for encouraging "bad habits" and explicit debauchery, contrasting sharply with norms that prioritize restraint and piety in public expression.[6][1] A notable incident occurred around 2020 when Tokischa participated in a photoshoot titled "Whores Also Pray," posing in revealing attire while simulating prayer inside a small church, which critics alleged vandalized the sacred space and mocked religious sanctity. She faced legal proceedings, paid a fine, and was nearly barred from the town, with detractors framing it as blasphemous defiance of Dominican cultural reverence for faith. Similarly, the Dominican Republic's Drug Control Agency and conservative factions have targeted her for normalizing drug references and prostitution in tracks, arguing such content erodes ethical norms and influences youth toward vice.[10] Educational authorities have also intervened against her work, banning the 2020 music video for "Desacato Escolar," which portrayed students in provocative scenarios including twerking and sexual undertones on a school bus, deeming it inappropriate for fostering disorder and explicit behavior in learning environments. Officials contended the video glorified "wrong" conduct, despite Tokischa's assertion that it mirrored authentic adolescent realities in underserved areas. In April 2021, government figures pushed to censor her lyrics—and those of similar artists—for allegedly praising lesbianism, drug consumption, and violence, reflecting broader efforts to align artistic output with prevailing heteronormative and abstemious cultural expectations.[10][6][33] This culminated in August 2021 when the Ministry of Culture prohibited her live performances nationwide, citing offensive material that offended public morals, a move supported by religious institutions but later reversed amid free speech advocacy. Such reactions underscore tensions between Tokischa's advocacy for unbridled personal expression and entrenched norms that prioritize communal propriety over individual provocation, with critics maintaining her themes exacerbate social decay in a nation grappling with poverty and traditionalism.[1][10]Specific incidents: "Perra" video and government scrutiny
In October 2021, J Balvin released the music video for "Perra," a reggaeton track featuring Dominican rapper Tokischa, which depicted Black women with exaggerated canine features, including leashes and dog-like masks, while Balvin and Tokischa interacted in provocative scenes filmed in the Dominican Republic.[5][34] The visuals drew immediate backlash for perceived racism and dehumanization of Black women, with critics arguing it reinforced stereotypes through animalistic portrayals akin to blackface tropes.[35][36] Colombian Vice President Marta Lucía Ramírez publicly condemned the video on October 22, 2021, labeling it "sexist, racist, chauvinist, and misogynistic" and urging Balvin to reflect on its societal impact, stating that such content undermines women's dignity and promotes harmful gender norms.[34] Colombia's Foreign Minister also echoed these sentiments, emphasizing the video's incompatibility with progressive values.[34] No direct statements from Dominican government officials specifically targeting "Perra" emerged in contemporaneous reports, though the production's location in the Dominican Republic amplified local discussions on cultural representation.[37] The video was quietly removed from Balvin's official YouTube channel on October 17, 2021, shortly after its upload, amid mounting online criticism from Afro-Latino activists and viewers who highlighted its failure to address entrenched anti-Black biases in Latin music visuals.[35][38] Balvin issued an apology on October 25, 2021, via Instagram, accepting full responsibility, acknowledging the unintended offense, and framing it as a learning opportunity about cultural sensitivity.[39] Tokischa, in a Rolling Stone interview on October 24, 2021, expressed regret over misinterpretations, explaining that her lyrics drew from personal empowerment themes and urban slang without intent to degrade, while defending artistic freedom but deferring to Balvin on the video's execution.[5] Video director Raymi Paulus similarly addressed the uproar, claiming the canine motifs symbolized rebellion against societal leashes rather than racial targeting, though this rationale faced skepticism for overlooking evident stereotypes.[5] The incident underscored broader tensions in Latin urban music between provocative expression and accountability for racial imagery, with some analysts noting that while apologies were issued, they did not fully engage with systemic colorism in the genre, as evidenced by persistent critiques from affected communities post-removal.[36][38]Criticisms of moral and social influence
Tokischa has faced accusations from Dominican conservative figures and institutions of exerting a negative moral influence, particularly by challenging Catholic traditions and promoting explicit content that allegedly erodes societal values. In August 2021, the municipal government of Jarabacoa condemned her for posing provocatively in front of a mural depicting the Virgin of Altagracia, the Dominican Republic's patron saint, describing the act as an "irreverent and disrespectful attitude that failed the ethical norms and moral values that govern an exemplary civilized coexistence."[40] The statement explicitly warned young artists against imitating her, framing the behavior as a "direct attempt against dignity" with potential to corrupt youth emulation of irreverence toward religious symbols.[40] Religious leaders echoed these concerns, with Father Francisco Jiménez of La Vega's Inmaculada Concepción Cathedral labeling her actions "shameful and low," highlighting perceived blasphemy in a predominantly Catholic nation where such iconography holds deep cultural reverence.[40] The incident led to legal repercussions, including a court summons for "disrespecting a religious sanctuary," resulting in a fine and a mandated public apology video from Tokischa on August 2021, underscoring official efforts to curb influences deemed socially corrosive.[41] Musician Ramón Orlando has criticized Tokischa's lyrics for their "morbid messages," arguing they actively influence adolescents toward drug consumption and moral laxity, distinguishing personal sin from public promotion that amplifies vice among impressionable youth in vulnerable communities.[42] Such critiques portray her work as amplifying hypersexualization and deviance in a society grappling with traditional values, potentially fostering generational disregard for ethical boundaries, though defenders counter that her art mirrors existing urban realities rather than originating them.[40]Reception and legacy
Achievements and commercial success
Tokischa has received several nominations and wins in Latin music awards, reflecting recognition within urban and dembow genres. In 2023, she won the Premios Tu Música Urbano award for Best Dembow Collaboration for "Delincuente" with Anuel AA and Ñengo Flow.[43] She earned nominations at the 2022 iHeartRadio Music Awards for Best New Latin Artist and at the 2023 Premio Lo Nuestro for Female New Artist and Urban Female Artist of the Year.[44][45] Her commercial performance is evidenced by substantial streaming metrics and chart entries. As of October 2025, Tokischa's tracks have amassed over 2 billion streams on Spotify.[46] In 2024, she became the most-streamed female Dominican artist on the platform.[3] The single "Linda" with Rosalía debuted at number 34 on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart in 2022. Several tracks, including "Ride or Die, Pt. 2" and "Chulo pt. 2," have exceeded 100 million streams each, contributing to gold and multi-platinum certifications from the Recording Industry Association of America for select releases.[47][48] Business milestones underscore her rising industry stature. In May 2024, Tokischa partnered with Warner Music Latina to launch her own imprint, SOL, marking a global distribution deal.[49] She signed her first worldwide publishing agreement with Warner Chappell Music in June 2024, facilitating broader monetization of her catalog.[50] These developments, alongside consistent chart presence in the Dominican Republic on Spotify and YouTube, highlight her transition from underground dembow artist to commercially viable figure in Latin urban music.[51]Critical evaluations and cultural impact
Tokischa's music has elicited mixed critical responses, with reviewers often highlighting her unfiltered explicitness and linguistic innovation alongside concerns over artistic depth. Pitchfork described her 2023 single "Daddy" featuring Sexyy Red as underwhelming, critiquing its lack of memorable one-liners and suggesting that frequent collaborations may dilute her focus, despite praising the track's carefree dembow elements and provocative video.[52] In contrast, The New York Times portrayed her as an iconoclast in Latin music for embracing Dominican slang and bisexuality in tracks like "Tukuntazo," attributing her appeal to fearless self-expression that challenges conventional norms.[9] Rolling Stone commended her for revitalizing dembow through raw depictions of sex, drugs, and queerness, with Bad Bunny calling her a "genius" for her punchy authenticity, though acknowledging public divisions where conservatives decry her as disrespectful to family values.[1] Her cultural impact centers on disrupting gender dynamics in Dominican urban music, where male-dominated dembow has long featured crude themes, yet her female-led explicitness has provoked disproportionate backlash, including a 2021 government ban on her "Linda" video with Rosalía for obscenity.[1] This resistance has positioned her as a symbol of bodily autonomy and feminist rebellion in the Dominican Republic, inspiring women to claim space in reggaeton and dembow amid machismo, as evidenced by her Sol foundation supporting marginalized women and her self-reported emphasis on independence drawn from personal experiences.[11] Globally, collaborations with artists like J Balvin and Anitta have elevated Dominican dembow's visibility, marking her as the first Dominican woman in urbano to perform NPR's Tiny Desk in 2022 and fostering queer visibility through unapologetic bisexuality in lyrics, though progressive critics occasionally fault her for potential self-objectification.[53][11] Such influence underscores a causal tension between her empirical success—evident in festival draw and international acclaim—and entrenched cultural conservatism, with religious institutions and educators citing her work's promotion of drugs and sex as socially corrosive.[6]Discography
Albums
Tokischa released her debut studio album, A&D*, in October 2025 under her label SOL in partnership with Warner Music Latina and Atlantic Records.[29][13] The album comprises eight tracks, including "CELOS", "MIAMI", "DE MARAVISHA", "Singamo" featuring Leo RD, "PISCIS", "SOL", "MUXAXA", and "A Woman's Work".[29] Produced primarily by Leo RD, it incorporates dembow rhythms fused with alternative rock and electro-pop influences, diverging from her earlier urban trap sound.[13] Described by Tokischa as a narrative "diary" chronicling personal hardships, A&D* marks her first full-length project after years of singles and EPs, with preview singles "Celos" and "Miami" released in June 2025.[13][54] Prior to this, no studio albums appear in her discography, which consists mainly of standalone releases and soundtrack contributions such as the Rebel Moon: Songs of the Rebellion EP.[54]Singles
As lead artist
Tokischa's singles as lead artist frequently incorporate dembow and reggaeton elements with explicit themes. Key releases include "Pícala" featuring Tivi Gunz, released on July 10, 2018, which marked her debut and achieved regional streaming success exceeding one million plays in its first week.[55][15] "Linda," a collaboration with Rosalía, was released on September 1, 2021, and debuted at live events like the 2021 Billboard Latin Music Awards.[56][57] "Delincuente," featuring Anuel AA and Ñengo Flow, followed on August 19, 2022.[58] More recent output includes "De Maravisha" featuring Nathy Peluso, issued December 17, 2024, and 2025 singles such as "MUXAXA" with La Mas Doll.[59][60]As featured artist
Tokischa has appeared on prominent tracks by established artists, expanding her reach in Latin urban music. Notable examples are "Perra" by J Balvin, released August 26, 2021, which generated controversy over its video content but charted in Latin markets.[61][5] "Chulo, Pt. 2" by Bad Gyal with Young Miko, released in 2023, and "Hung Up on Tokischa," a dembow-infused remix of Madonna's "Hung Up" from 2005, issued September 2022.[62] Other appearances include "Ride or Die, Pt. 2" by Villano Antillano in 2023.[63]As lead artist
Tokischa released her debut single "Pícala" in 2018 under Paulus Music, marking her entry into the Dominican urban music scene with a collaboration featuring Tivi Gunz.[64] Subsequent lead singles include "De Maravisha", issued on December 13, 2024, which features Nathy Peluso and highlights her evolving style blending dembow with broader Latin influences.[65] In 2025, she dropped pre-release singles for her anticipated debut album, such as "Celos" and "Miami", signaling a shift toward more structured production while retaining her provocative lyrical edge.[13] Other recent lead efforts encompass "MUXAXA" in collaboration with La Mas Doll, released in 2025, further expanding her catalog amid growing international attention.[66]As featured artist
- "7 de Mayo" by J Balvin, from the album JOSE, released September 24, 2021.[67]
- "LA COMBI VERSACE" by Rosalía, from the album MOTOMAMI, released March 18, 2022.[68]
- "Hung Up on Tokischa" by Madonna, a dembow remix released September 2022.[69]
- "Hey Mor" by Ozuna featuring Chencho Corleone and Tokischa, from the album OzuTochi, released 2022.[70]
- "Ride Or Die, Pt. 2" by Sevdaliza featuring Pabllo Vittar, Villano Antillano, and Tokischa, released 2023.
- "Chulo Pt. 2" by Bad Gyal featuring Young Miko and Tokischa, from the album La Joia, released October 2023.[71]
- "No Pare (Remix)" by Natti Natasha featuring Tokischa, released 2023.[72] Wait, use [web:32] https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLAGEqetsi5-QPdxGl32M_5ENJpZPh8wwR but for specific, perhaps general.
- 2021: "7 de Mayo" (J Balvin)[67]
- 2022: "LA COMBI VERSACE" (Rosalía)[68]
- 2022: "Hung Up on Tokischa" (Madonna)
- 2022: "Hey Mor" (Ozuna feat. Chencho Corleone)[70]
- 2023: "Ride Or Die, Pt. 2" (Sevdaliza feat. Pabllo Vittar and Villano Antillano)
- 2023: "Chulo Pt. 2" (Bad Gyal feat. Young Miko)[71]
- 2023: "No Pare (Remix)" (Natti Natasha)[73]
Other charted songs
"Tukuntazo", released in March 2021 as a collaboration with El Cherry Scom and Haraca Kiko, entered the Billboard LyricFind Global chart the following month, reflecting its lyrical appeal and online search interest.[2] Other tracks, including "SOL" and "ESTILAZO" from 2022, have registered positions on Spotify charts in the Dominican Republic, indicating regional streaming success amid her rising profile in urban Latin genres.[74]Awards and nominations
Tokischa has received several nominations and one win across various Latin music awards, primarily recognizing her contributions to urban and dembow genres.[75]| Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | iHeartRadio Music Awards | Best New Latin Artist | Herself | Nominated[76] |
| 2022 | Latin Grammy Awards | Album of the Year | Motomami (as songwriter) | Won[77] |
| 2022 | Premios Juventud | Girl Power (Best Female Collaboration) | "Linda" (with Rosalía) | Nominated[45] |
| 2023 | Premio Lo Nuestro | Artist or Group of the Year – Urban Female | Herself | Nominated[44] |
| 2023 | Premio Lo Nuestro | New Female Artist | Herself | Nominated[44] |
| 2025 | Premio Lo Nuestro | Female Collaboration of the Year | "Chulo Pt. 2" (with Bad Gyal and Young Miko) | Won[78] |
| 2025 | Premio Lo Nuestro | Urban Song of the Year | "Chulo Pt. 2" (with Bad Gyal and Young Miko) | Nominated[79] |
| 2025 | Premio Lo Nuestro | Best Urban Pop "Eurosong" | "Chulo Pt. 2" (with Bad Gyal and Young Miko) | Nominated[79] |
| 2025 | Latin Grammy Awards | Best Urban Song | "De Maravisha" (featuring Nathy Peluso) | Nominated[77] |