Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 18, 2026

Pop Airplay

Pop Airplay is a 40-song music chart published weekly by Billboard magazine that ranks the most popular songs of pop music being played on a panel of Top 40 radio stations in the United States. The rankings are based on radio airplay detections as measured by Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems, a subsidiary of the United States' leading marketing research company. Consumer researchers, Nielsen Audio, refers to the format as contemporary hit radio (CHR). The current number-one song on the chart is "So Easy " by Olivia Dean.

Last revised
Jun 18, 2026
Read time
≈ 21 min
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196
Source

Pop Airplay (formerly known as Pop Songs, Mainstream Top 40 and Top 40/Mainstream) is a 40-song music chart published weekly by Billboard magazine that ranks the most popular songs of pop music being played on a panel of Top 40 radio stations in the United States. The rankings are based on radio airplay detections as measured by Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems (Nielsen BDS), a subsidiary of the United States' leading marketing research company. Consumer researchers, Nielsen Audio (formerly Arbitron), refers to the format as contemporary hit radio (CHR). The current number-one song on the chart is "So Easy (To Fall in Love)" by Olivia Dean.1

History

The chart debuted in Billboard magazine in its issued date October 3, 1992, with the introduction of two Top 40 airplay charts, Mainstream and Rhythm-Crossover. Both Top 40 charts measured "actual monitored airplay" from data compiled by Broadcast Data Systems (BDS). The Top 40/Mainstream chart was compiled from airplay on radio stations playing a wide variety of music, while the Top 40/Rhythm-Crossover chart was made up from airplay on stations playing more dance and R&B music.2 Both charts were "born of then-new BDS electronic monitoring technology" as a more objective and precise way of measuring airplay on radio stations. This data was also used as the airplay component for Hot 100 tabulations.2 American Top 40 with Shadoe Stevens used this chart for their show from January 1993 to January 1995.

Top 40/Mainstream was published in the print edition of Billboard from its debut in October 1992 through May 1995, when both Top 40 charts were moved exclusively to Airplay Monitor, a secondary chart publication by Billboard. They returned to the print edition in the August 2, 2003, issue.3 The first number-one song on the chart was "End of the Road" by Boyz II Men.4

Chart criteria

There are forty positions on this chart. Songs are ranked based on its total number of spins per week. This is calculated by electronically monitoring Mainstream Top 40 radio stations across the U.S. 24 hours a day, seven days a week by Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems.

Songs receiving the greatest growth receive a "bullet", although there are tracks that also get bullets if the loss in detections doesn't exceed the percentage of downtime from a monitored station. "Airpower" awards are issued to songs that appear on the top 20 of both the airplay and audience chart for the first time, while the "greatest gainer" award is given to song with the largest increase in detections. A song with six or more spins in its first week is awarded an "airplay add". If two songs are tied in spins in the same week, the one with the biggest increase that week ranks higher.

Since the introduction of the chart until 2005, songs below No. 20 were moved to recurrent after 26 weeks on the chart. Beginning the chart week of December 3, 2005, songs below No. 20 were moved to recurrent after 20 weeks on the chart. Since the chart dated December 4, 2010, songs below No. 15 are moved to recurrent after 20 weeks on the chart.

Whereas the Pop Airplay and Pop 100 Airplay charts both measured the airplay of songs played on Mainstream stations playing pop-oriented music, the Pop 100 Airplay (like the Hot 100 Airplay) measured airplay based on statistical impressions, while the Top 40 Mainstream chart used the number of total detections.

Source:5

All-time achievements

In 2012, for the 20th anniversary of the chart, Billboard compiled a ranking of the 100 best-performing songs on the chart over the 20 years, along with the best-performing artists. "Iris" by Goo Goo Dolls ranked as the #1 song on that list.67 In 2017, Billboard revised the rankings, including the methodologies for how they are calculated. "Another Night" by Real McCoy was the new #1 song, while the previous #1 song, "Iris", dropped to #8. Rihanna ranked as the top artist on both all-time charts.8 Shown below are the top 10 songs and the top 10 artists from the most recent chart.

Top 10 Pop Songs of all time (1992–2017)

Rank Single Year released Artist(s) Peak and duration
1.
"Another Night"
1994
Real McCoy #1 for 6 weeks
2.
"Smooth"
1999
Santana featuring Rob Thomas #1 for 8 weeks
3.
"Hanging by a Moment"
2000
Lifehouse #2 for 12 weeks
4.
"Apologize"
2007
Timbaland featuring OneRepublic #1 for 8 weeks
5.
"How You Remind Me"
2001
Nickelback #1 for 10 weeks
6.
"Here Without You"
2003
3 Doors Down #1 for 6 weeks
7.
"Don't Speak"
1996
No Doubt #1 for 10 weeks
8.
"Iris"
1998
Goo Goo Dolls #1 for 4 weeks
9.
"Closer"
2016
The Chainsmokers featuring Halsey #1 for 11 weeks
10.
"I Love You Always Forever"
1996
Donna Lewis

Source:9

Top 10 Pop Songs artists of all time (1992–2017)

Rank Artist
1.
Rihanna
2.
Pink
3.
Maroon 5
4.
Katy Perry
5.
Justin Timberlake
6.
Britney Spears
7.
Taylor Swift
8.
Kelly Clarkson
9.
Mariah Carey
10.
Bruno Mars

Source:10

Song records

Most weeks at number one

Number of
weeks
Artist Song Year(s) Source
16 Alex Warren "Ordinary" 2025 11
14 Ace of Base "The Sign" 1994 12
13 The Kid Laroi and Justin Bieber "Stay" 2021 13
11 Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men "One Sweet Day" 1995–96 12
Donna Lewis "I Love You Always Forever" 1996 12
Natalie Imbruglia "Torn" 1998 12
Nelly featuring Tim McGraw "Over and Over" 2004–05 12
The Chainsmokers featuring Halsey "Closer" 2016 12
10 Dionne Farris "I Know" 1995 12
No Doubt "Don't Speak" 1996–97 12
Céline Dion "My Heart Will Go On" 1998 12
'N Sync "Bye Bye Bye" 2000 12
Nickelback "How You Remind Me" 2001–02 12
Mariah Carey "We Belong Together" 2005 12
Robin Thicke featuring T.I. and Pharrell "Blurred Lines" 2013 12
Post Malone "Circles" 2019–20 12
Miley Cyrus "Flowers" 2023 14
Taylor Swift "Cruel Summer" 15

Most weeks in the top 10

Number of
weeks
Artist Song Year(s) Source
45
Rema and Selena Gomez "Calm Down" 2023–24 16
Alex Warren "Ordinary" 2025–26
41
Harry Styles "As It Was" 2022–23
Benson Boone "Beautiful Things" 2024–25
40
The Kid Laroi and Justin Bieber "Stay" 2021–22
Hozier "Too Sweet" 2024–25
Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars "Die with a Smile"
39
The Weeknd "Blinding Lights" 2020
36
Sabrina Carpenter "Espresso" 2024–25
Shaboozey "A Bar Song (Tipsy)"
Billie Eilish "Birds of a Feather"

Most weeks on the chart

Number of
weeks
Artist Song Year* Source
71 Rema and Selena Gomez "Calm Down" 2024 17
63 Harry Styles "As It Was" 2023 18
60 The Weeknd "Blinding Lights" 2021 19
Benson Boone "Beautiful Things" 2025 20
58 Alex Warren "Ordinary" 2026 11
54 Glass Animals "Heat Waves" 2022 19
51 Hozier "Too Sweet" 2025 21
50 The Weeknd "Die for You" 2023 22
Billie Eilish "Birds of a Feather" 2025 23
Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars "Die with a Smile" 24
Chappell Roan "Pink Pony Club" 25

*Year when the songs ended their respective chart runs.

Prior to 2018, the song with the most weeks on the chart was "I'll Be" by Edwin McCain, which spent 41 weeks on the chart in 1998. This record run held for almost two decades, but has been surpassed many times since then. Radio stations having more data points, such as streaming, to increase their accuracy at measuring what radio listeners want to hear, have made longer runs more commonplace.26

Taylor Swift has the highest debut at number eight with "The Fate of Ophelia".27 source ↗

Highest debut

Debut
Position
Artist Song Debut Date Source
No. 8 Taylor Swift "The Fate of Ophelia" October 18, 2025 27
No. 12 Mariah Carey "Dreamlover" August 14, 1993 28
Taylor Swift "Shake It Off" September 6, 2014 29
No. 13 Taylor Swift featuring Kendrick Lamar "Bad Blood" June 6, 2015 30
Taylor Swift featuring Post Malone "Fortnight" May 4, 2024 31
No. 14 Lady Gaga "Born This Way" February 26, 2011 28
Justin Timberlake featuring Jay-Z "Suit & Tie" February 2, 2013 32
No. 16 Madonna "Frozen" March 7, 1998 28
Britney Spears "Hold It Against Me" January 29, 2011 28
Miley Cyrus "Flowers" January 28, 2023 33
NSYNC "Better Place" October 14, 2023 34
Dua Lipa "Houdini" November 25, 2023 35
Bruno Mars "I Just Might" January 24, 2026 36
Harry Styles "Aperture" February 7, 2026 37
BTS "Swim" April 4, 2026 38

Shortest climbs to number one

Week reached
number one
Artist(s) Song Date reached
number one
Source
4th week Whitney Houston "I Will Always Love You" December 12, 1992 39
Mariah Carey "Dreamlover" September 4, 1993 40
The Rembrandts "I'll Be There for You" June 17, 1995 41
Nelly featuring Tim McGraw "Over and Over" November 6, 2004 42
5th week Janet Jackson "That's the Way Love Goes" May 29, 1993 43
Ace of Base "All That She Wants" October 30, 1993 44
All-4-One "I Swear" May 28, 1994 45
Boyz II Men "I'll Make Love to You" September 10, 1994 46
Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men "One Sweet Day" December 9, 1995 47
Taylor Swift featuring Kendrick Lamar "Bad Blood" July 4, 2015 48
Adele "Hello" December 5, 2015 49
Justin Timberlake "Can't Stop the Feeling!" June 18, 2016 50
Miley Cyrus "Flowers" March 4, 2023 51

Longest climbs to number one

Week reached
number one
Artist(s) Song Date reached
number one
Source
37th week Lewis Capaldi "Before You Go" September 26, 2020 52
32nd week Glass Animals "Heat Waves" January 29, 2022 53
31st week Benny Blanco, Halsey and Khalid "Eastside" March 2, 2019 54
28th week Trevor Daniel "Falling" July 25, 2020 55
Rema and Selena Gomez "Calm Down" May 13, 2023 56
27th week Dua Lipa featuring DaBaby "Levitating" June 19, 2021 57
26th week Alessia Cara "Here" February 6, 2016 58
Sombr "Back to Friends" February 7, 2026 59
25th week CeeLo Green "Forget You" April 16, 2011 58
Demi Lovato "Give Your Heart a Break" September 15, 2012 58

Biggest jump to number one

Chart
movement
Artist(s) Song Date reached
number one
Source
7–1 Nelly featuring Tim McGraw "Over and Over" November 6, 2004 60
6–1 All-4-One "I Swear" May 28, 1994 61
The Rembrandts "I'll Be There for You" June 17, 1995 62
5–1 Nicki French "Total Eclipse of the Heart" June 10, 1995 63
Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men "One Sweet Day" December 9, 1995 64
Mariah Carey "Shake It Off" September 24, 2005 65
Katy Perry featuring Snoop Dogg "California Gurls" July 3, 2010 66
Katy Perry "Roar" September 28, 2013 67
Tove Lo "Habits (Stay High)" November 15, 2014 68
Demi Lovato "Sorry Not Sorry" November 4, 2017 69
Shaboozey "A Bar Song (Tipsy)" August 17, 2024 70

Biggest drop from number one

Chart
movement
Artist(s) Song Date Source
1–7 Taylor Swift "Look What You Made Me Do" November 4, 2017 71
1–6 Shaggy featuring Rayvon "Angel" May 5, 2001 72
1–5 Whitney Houston "I Will Always Love You" February 13, 1993 73
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis featuring Ray Dalton "Can't Hold Us" July 20, 2013 74
Selena Gomez "Hands to Myself" April 23, 2016 75
Trevor Daniel "Falling" August 1, 2020 76
Post Malone featuring Morgan Wallen "I Had Some Help" August 17, 2024 77

Shortest climbs to the top 10

Week reached
top 10
Artist(s) Song Date reached
top 10
Source
1st week Taylor Swift "The Fate of Ophelia" October 18, 2025 27
2nd week Janet Jackson "That's the Way Love Goes" May 8, 1993 78
Mariah Carey "Dreamlover" August 21, 1993 79
The Rembrandts "I'll Be There for You" June 3, 1995 80
Madonna "Frozen" March 14, 1998 81
NSYNC "Pop" June 9, 2001 82
Eminem "Just Lose It" October 16, 2004 83
Britney Spears "Hold It Against Me" February 5, 2011 84
Lady Gaga "Born This Way" March 5, 2011 85
Taylor Swift "Shake It Off" September 13, 2014 86
Taylor Swift featuring Kendrick Lamar "Bad Blood" June 13, 2015 87
Justin Timberlake "Can't Stop the Feeling!" May 28, 2016 88
Taylor Swift "Look What You Made Me Do" September 16, 2017 89
Taylor Swift featuring Brendon Urie "Me!" May 11, 2019 90
Ed Sheeran "Bad Habits" July 10, 2021 91

Longest climbs to the top 10

Week reached
top 10
Artist(s) Song Date reached top 10 Source
35th week
Lauv "I Like Me Better" June 23, 2018 26
31st week
Edwin McCain "I'll Be" October 17, 1998 26
28th week
Tame Impala and Jennie "Dracula" June 6, 2026 26
27th week Max featuring Gnash "Lights Down Low" February 3, 2018 26
Lewis Capaldi "Before You Go" July 18, 2020 92
AJR "Bang!" December 12, 2020 93
25th week MKTO "Classic" July 12, 2014 26
Daya "Sit Still, Look Pretty" October 15, 2016 26
Jon Bellion "All Time Low" March 11, 2017 26
Madison Beer "Make You Mine" September 7, 2024 94

Artist records

Taylor Swift holds the record for most number-one singles with 15, spanning over 16 years between her first and last hit.95 With 51 weeks at number-one, she also holds the record for having spent the most weeks at the summit.15 source ↗

Most number-one singles

Number of
singles
Artist Source
15 Taylor Swift 96
12 Bruno Mars 97
11 Justin Bieber 98
Katy Perry 99
Maroon 5 99
Rihanna 99
10 Ariana Grande 100
9 Pink 99
8 Doja Cat 101
Justin Timberlake 102
Lady Gaga 103

Most cumulative weeks at number one

Number of
weeks
Artist Source
51
Taylor Swift 15
47
Katy Perry 104
45
Mariah Carey 105
43
Bruno Mars 106
41
Justin Bieber 107
39
Maroon 5 108
32 Pink 109
Rihanna 109
30
Ariana Grande 110
29
Ace of Base 109

Most top 10 singles

Number of
singles
Artist Source
30
Rihanna 111
29 Taylor Swift 15
23 Ariana Grande 110
22 Justin Bieber 107
Maroon 5 108
21 Bruno Mars 106
19 Justin Timberlake 112
Pink 111
18 The Weeknd 22
17 Katy Perry 104
Mariah Carey 113

Most chart entries

Number of
entries
Artist Source
52
Rihanna 114
50
Taylor Swift 15
47
Nicki Minaj 115
44
Justin Bieber 107
43
Chris Brown 116
42
Drake 117
41
Pitbull 118
38
Ariana Grande 110
37
Britney Spears 119
34
Justin Timberlake 112

Simultaneously occupying the top two positions

  1. "One Sweet Day" (with Boyz II Men)
  2. "Fantasy"
  • OutKast: January 31–February 7, 2004
  1. "Hey Ya!"
  2. "The Way You Move" (featuring Sleepy Brown)
  1. "Blurred Lines" (Robin Thicke featuring T.I. and Pharrell)
  2. "Get Lucky" (Daft Punk featuring Pharrell Williams and Nile Rogers)
  1. "Fancy" (featuring Charli XCX)
  2. "Problem" (Ariana Grande featuring Iggy Azalea)
  • Halsey: February 23–March 9, 2019
  1. "Without Me"
  2. "Eastside" (with Benny Blanco and Khalid)
  1. "34+35"
  2. "Positions"
  1. "Good 4 U"
  2. "Deja Vu"
  1. "I Like You (A Happier Song)" (Post Malone featuring Doja Cat)
  2. "Vegas"
  1. "Apt." (Rosé and Bruno Mars)
  2. "Die with a Smile" (Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars)

Source:120121122123

Simultaneously three or more songs in the top 10

Source:124125126127

Self-replacement at number one

† Iggy Azalea is the only act in Mainstream Top 40 history to replace herself at number one with her first two chart entries.

†† Ariana Grande became the first artist to succeed herself at number one as the only act credited on both tracks.

Source:128129

Additional artist achievements

Lady Gaga is the only musical artist in history to have her first six singles all reach the number-one position on this chart. source ↗
  • Lady Gaga is the only artist to have her first six singles reach No. 1.130
  • JoJo became the youngest (13) solo artist to have a number-one single on the chart with "Leave (Get Out)".131
  • Rihanna is the youngest (22) artist to attain at least seven No. 1 singles on the chart.132
  • Justin Bieber became the youngest (26) male artist to attain at least seven No. 1 singles on the chart with "Intentions" (featuring Quavo).132
  • Kate Bush broke the record for the oldest song to have ever charted on the Mainstream Top 40 chart with "Running Up That Hill", originally released in 1985. It charted in 2022 after its use in the fourth season of Stranger Things. The previous record holder was Empire of the Sun, whose song "Walking on a Dream", originally released in 2008, charted in 2016 after its use in a Honda commercial.

Album records

Most number-one singles from an album

Number of
singles
Artist Album Year(s) Source
6
Katy Perry Teenage Dream 2010–12 133
5
Taylor Swift 1989 2014–15 133
4 Justin Timberlake FutureSex/LoveSounds 2006–07 133
Lady Gaga The Fame 2009 133
Sabrina Carpenter Short n' Sweet 2024–25 133
3 Ace of Base The Sign 1993–94 134
Alanis Morissette Jagged Little Pill 1996 134
Avril Lavigne Let Go 2002–03 134
Maroon 5 Overexposed 2012–13 134
Justin Bieber Purpose 2015–16 134
Selena Gomez Revival 134
Dua Lipa Future Nostalgia 2020–21 134
Lil Nas X Montero 2021–22 134
Doja Cat Planet Her 134
References

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