Good Kid, M.A.A.D City was met with widespread critical acclaim. At
Metacritic, which assigns a
normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from professional publications, the album received an
average score of 91, based on 36 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim". Reviewing the album for
Rolling Stone, Jody Rosen said it "warrants a place in that storied lineage" of "Seventies
blaxploitation soundtracks and Nineties
gangsta rap blaxploitation revivals".
Pitchforks Jayson Greene wrote that "the miracle of this album is how it ties straightforward rap thrills" to its "weighty material" and narrative,
Fact journalist Joseph Morpurgo called it an autobiographical "triumph of breadth" and a "wide-ranging, far-reaching success". Jaeki Cho of
XXL hailed
Good Kid, M.A.A.D City as "one of the most cohesive bodies of work in recent rap memory" and wrote that each song sounded "both complexly arranged and sonically fitting, foregrounding Kendrick's vivid lyricism and amazing control of cadence". while Alex Macpherson of
The Guardian found "Lamar's depiction of downtrodden women" to be "unnecessarily prurient and unconvincing". In December 2012,
Complex also named
Good Kid, M.A.A.D City one of the 25 classic hip-hop albums of the previous 10 years.
Complex also ranked its album cover as the best of 2012, while
Pitchfork included it on its list of the 20 best album covers of the year. In April 2013,
Vibe placed the album at number 19 on its "The Greatest 50 Albums Since '93" list. The album was also included in the book
1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. In October 2013,
Complex named it the second best hip-hop album of the last five years. Also in 2013,
Rolling Stone placed the album at 86 on its "The 100 Best Debut Albums of All Time" list. The album was ranked number two of "The 100 Best Albums of the Decade So Far (2010-2014)", a list published by
Pitchfork in August 2014 and number five of "The 20 Best Albums of the 2010s (so far)", a list published by
Billboard in January 2015. In 2020 and 2023, the album was ranked at 115 on
Rolling Stones "
500 Greatest Albums of All Time" list. In 2022, it was ranked number one on
Rolling Stones "50 Greatest Concept Albums of All Time" list. In 2024,
Paste ranked
Good Kid, M.A.A.D City number 72 on its list of "The 300 Greatest Albums of All Time". In 2024,
Apple Music ranked
Good Kid M.A.A.D City number seven on its list of
Apple Music 100 Best Albums. In 2025, the album was ranked at six on
Rolling Stones "Best Albums of the 21st Century So Far" list. The album was nominated for Top Rap Album at the 2013
Billboard Music Awards and the 2013
American Music Awards, and won the award for Album of the Year at the 2013
BET Hip Hop Awards.
Good Kid M.A.A.D City earned Lamar four
Grammy Award nominations at the
56th Grammy Awards, for
Album of The Year,
Best Rap Album,
Best Rap/Sung Performance for "Now or Never" with
Mary J. Blige, and
Best Rap Performance for "Swimming Pools (Drank)". Its loss of the Best Rap Album award to
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis'
The Heist was dubbed an "infamous snub" by
Rolling Stones Andre Gee.
Macklemore himself deemed the loss a robbery and apologized to Lamar via
iMessage.
Response from Shyne On October 23, 2012, after
Good Kid, M.A.A.D City received much critical acclaim from the hip-hop community, rapper
Shyne took to Twitter to disparage the album, calling it "trash" and in particular disparaged its production.
West Coast rappers
Nipsey Hussle, Schoolboy Q and
the Game quickly took offense to this, with the Game defending Lamar due to his "non-confrontational nature". Lamar would later respond to Shyne's comments on October 26, saying that he is not a sensitive person and was unfazed by his comments. In addition he said
Good Kid, M.A.A.D City was not necessarily a "classic" as some have called it, but "classic worthy" if enough time would pass. He would later reference Shyne on the song "The Jig Is Up", stating: "I pray to God this beat good enough for Shyne". After Shyne stood by his comments, the Game responded with a freestyle calling out Shyne, entitled "Cough Up a Lung". Shyne would later respond with his own
diss track in retaliation, titled "Psalms 68 (Guns & Moses)". In November 2024, Shyne expressed his regret for slamming the album on a podcast and acknowledging Lamar as "one of the greatest musicians of our generation."
Academic reception In 2014, it was reported that
Good Kid, M.A.A.D City was being studied as a text in the freshman composition class of
Georgia Regents University professor Adam Diehl, alongside other
coming of age works such as the
James Joyce novel
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man,
Gwendolyn Brooks'
Selected Poems,
James Baldwin's short story "
Going to Meet the Man", and the
John Singleton film
Boyz n the Hood. The theme of the class was meant to "inspire students to find an outlet to bring some sanity to our own mad city–Augusta", Diehl told
HipHopDX. "Lamar is the James Joyce of hip-hop", he said, "in the complexity of his storytelling, in his knowledge of the canon, and in his continuing focus on the city of his upbringing—Compton." == Track listing ==