The wait finally has a date. Tiffany Young will release her first full-length album on May 11, marking a milestone a decade in the making. The project arrives exactly 10 years after her first mini-album, ‘I Just Wanna Dance.’
For fans who followed her from Girls’ Generation through her solo evolution, the timing is anything but coincidental. May 11 now carries double meaning: the birth of her early solo identity and the launch of her most complete artistic statement yet.
When ‘I Just Wanna Dance’ dropped in 2016, it introduced Tiffany as a solo artist finding her footing in R&B and dance-pop. That EP was short but confident. Now, 10 years later, the first full-length album promises depth that only time and experience can build.
The artist has spent the intervening years touring, writing independently, and releasing singles that tested new sonic territory. This album is not a rushed victory lap. It is the earned result of revisiting every question her earlier work raised.
Releasing exactly 10 years after her debut mini-album turns the calendar into a storytelling device. Tiffany Young is not erasing her past. She is completing a sentence she started a decade ago.
The gap between a first EP and a first LP is usually two or three years. Ten years is unusual. That length signals creative detours, label shifts, and the courage to wait until the work feels whole. Every song on this album carries the weight of that patience.
With the date locked, fans expect a rollout. Singles, tracklist reveals, and visual teasers are likely in the weeks ahead. The album will arrive on streaming platforms May 11. Physical format details have not been confirmed.
For an artist who has always treated her career as a long conversation with her audience, this is the longest chapter yet. Ten years after ‘I Just Wanna Dance,’ Tiffany Young finally tells the rest of the story.


