The Billboard 200 measures the commercial performance of the top albums during the weekly tracking period from Friday through Thursday. While the charts used to be determined just by record sales, the evolving technological landscape has prompted Billboard to adjust its methodology in the 21st century.
One of the most significant alterations came in 2014 when Billboard transitioned to a combination of factors including online streams and individual track sales in addition to the traditional album sales that previously made up the entirety of the Billboard 200’s measurement. Now an album sale counts as one album unit. Sales of 10 individual tracks also counts as a unit. And you need 3,750 ad-supported streams or 1,250 paid subscription streams to equal one unit. In 2020 Billboard also started considering streams of music videos on platforms like YouTube.
The record for the most number-one albums is held by The Beatles with 19; they also hold the record for the most number-one singles on the Billboard Hot 100 with 20. Beatles alum Paul McCartney actually has 27 top albums when you count his solo albums and those he recorded with the band Wings. Jay-Z ranks second with 14 number-one albums, which makes him the top solo artist on the all-time list. Taylor Swift is next with 13 number-ones. Barbra Streisand is the only artist to claim the top spot in six different decades.
Who’s making history this year? See the full list below, updating throughout 2024.
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Tyler the Creator, ‘CHROMAKOPIA’
1 week at number-one
This is the rapper’s third number-one album, and it debuted with more album units than he has ever achieved before. That includes his best sales week and best streaming week ever.
November 9 — 299,500 album units
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Yeat, ‘Lyfestyle’
1 week at number-one
This is the first number-one album of the rapper’s career, and it’s his best week ever by equivalent album units. His last four albums also debuted in the top 10.
November 2 — 89,000 album units
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Jelly Roll, ‘Beautifully Broken’
1 week at number-one
This is the first number-one album of Jelly Roll’s career and achieved the most album units and most pure sales of his career thus far. It achieved the third strongest week for a country album of 2024, behind only Beyonce and Post Malone.
October 26 — 161,000 album units
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Coldplay, ‘Moon Music’
1 week at number-one
This is Coldplay’s fifth number-one album and their 10th top-10 album. “Moon Music” is their first album to top the list since “Ghost Stories” a decade ago.
October 19 — 120,000 album units
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Sabrina Carpenter, ‘Short n’ Sweet’
4 weeks at number-one
This is Sabrina Carpenter’s sixth album, but it’s her first chart-topper. In fact, it’s her first album to even crack the top 20. Her last album, “Emails I Can’t Send,” peaked at number-23.
September 7 — 362,000 album units
September 14 — 159,000 album units
September 21 — 117,000 album units
October 12 — 100,000 album units
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Future, ‘Mixtape Pluto’
1 week at number-one
This is Future’s third number-one album of the year, following his Metro Boomin collabs “We Don’t Trust You” and “We Still Don’t Trust You.” Overall, the rapper has topped the Billboard 200 with 11 different albums, tying him for the fifth most of all time.
October 5 — 129,000 album units
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Travis Scott, ‘Days Before Rodeo’
1 week at number-one
This is Scott’s fourth number-one album on the Billboard 200. A mixtape from 2014, it was commercially released for the first time in 2024 and debuted at number-two on the chart. It bounced back all the way to number-one thanks to its release on vinyl, which resulted in the biggest vinyl sales for a rap album in history.
September 28 — 156,000 album units
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Post Malone, ‘F-1 Trillion’
1 week at number-one
This is Post Malone’s third number-one album and his first since “Hollywood’s Bleeding” in 2019. It’s also his first leader on the Top Country Albums chart.
August 31 — 250,000 album units
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Taylor Swift, ‘The Tortured Poets Department’
15 weeks at number-one
This is her 14th career number-one, tying Jay-Z for the most chart-toppers among solo artists. Only The Beatles have more (19). It also achieved the biggest streaming week of all time and dominated the Hot 100 singles chart by occupying all of the top 14 spots. It ultimately became the first album by a woman to spend its first 12 weeks at number-one and the third longest-running number-one album by a woman in history.
May 4 — 2.61 million album units
May 11 — 439,000 album units
May 18 — 289,000 album units
May 25 — 260,000 album units
June 1 — 378,000 album units
June 8 — 175,000 album units
June 15 — 148,000 album units
June 22 — 128,000 album units
June 29 — 126,000 album units
July 6 — 115,000 album units
July 13 — 114,000 album units
July 20 — 163,000 album units
August 10 — 71,000 album units
August 17 — 142,000 album units
August 24 — 85,000 album units
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Stray Kids, ‘Ate’
1 week at number-one
The K-pop band makes history as the first group to hit-number one with their first five albums. “Ate” follows “Oddinary,” “Maxident,” “Rock-Star” and “5-Star.
August 3 — 232,000 album units
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Eminem, ‘The Death of Slim Shady (Coup De Grace)’
1 week at number-one
This is the veteran rapper’s 11th album to reach number-one, tying Bruce Springsteen, Barbra Streisand and Kanye West for the fifth most number-one albums in history.
July 27 — 281,000 album units
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Metro Boomin and Future, ‘We Still Don’t Trust You’
1 week at number-one
It’s the 10th number-one album for Future and the fifth for Metro Boomin. It makes Future one of just 10 artists to achieve 10 number-one albums in their career.
April 27 — 127,500 album units
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Beyonce, ‘Cowboy Carter’
2 weeks at number-one
This is Beyonce’s eighth number-one album, which places her fourth among women for the most chart-toppers of all time. It also generated the most one-week streams of her entire career. Additionally, she became the first Black woman ever to top the Top Country Albums chart.
April 13 — 407,000 album units
April 20 — 125,500 album units -
Metro Boomin and Future, ‘We Don’t Trust You’
1 week at number-one
It’s the ninth number-one album for Future and the fourth for Metro Boomin. It also had the biggest week of Metro Boomin’s career and the second biggest of Future’s career.
April 6 — 251,000 album units
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Ariana Grande, ‘Eternal Sunshine’
2 weeks at number-one
It’s the sixth number-one album of Grande’s career, following “Yours Truly,” “My Everything,” “Sweetener,” “Thank U, Next” and “Positions.” It features the Billboard Hot 100 number-one hits “Yes, And?” and “We Can’t Be Friends (Wait for Your Love).”
March 23 — 227,000 album units
March 30 — 100,500 album units -
Morgan Wallen, ‘One Thing at a Time’
3 weeks at number-one in 2024 (19 weeks total)
This is the longest run at number-one for any album since Adele’s “21” spent 24 nonconsecutive weeks on top. “One Thing at a Time” was recently named Billboard number-one album of 2023. It’s the longest running number-one country album of all time.
January 20 — 61,000 album units
February 10 — 66,000 album units
March 16 — 68,000 album units -
Twice, ‘With You-th’
1 week at number-one
This is the K-pop girl group’s first number-one album. They’re the third female group in three years to top the chart, following Blackpink and NewJeans.
March 9 — 95,000 album units
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Kanye West and Ty Dolla $ign, ‘Vultures 1’
2 weeks at number-one
This is the 11th chart topper for Kanye West and the first for Ty Dolla $ign. The album arrived after multiple delays and amid coontroversy after antisemitic statements made by West in the past year.
February 24 — 148,000 album units
March 2 — 75,000 album units -
Toby Keith, ’35 Biggest Hits’
1 week at number-one
The country star topped the chart shortly after his death from cancer on February 5. It’s the fifth number-one album for Keith, but it’s his first since 2010.
February 17 — 66,000 album units
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21 Savage, ‘American Dream’
2 weeks at number-one
This is the fourth consecutive number-one album for the rapper, who previously topped the chart with “I Am > I Was,” “Savage Mode II” (with Metro Boomin) and “Her Loss” (with Drake). It achieved his biggest week ever for a non-collaborative album.
January 27 — 133,000 album units
February 3 — 78,000 album units -
Taylor Swift, ‘1989 (Taylor’s Version)’
2 weeks at number-one in 2024 (6 weeks total)
By spending a fifth week at number-one, “1989 (Taylor’s Version)” extended its record as the longest-running chart topper among Swift’s re-recorded albums. It also secured her 68th total week at number-one on the Billboard 200, more than any other solo artist and second only to The Beatles among all artists.
January 6 — 98,000 album units
January 13 — 64,000 album units