The Beatles, Taylor Swift, Drake, Mariah Carey & More: Acts With the Most Billboard 200 & Hot 100 No. 1s Combined
These artists stand at the pinnacle of chart success with both albums and songs.
Topping the Billboard 200 albums chart or the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart marks a milestone achievement for any artist.
Topping both tallies reflects that an act can boast mass appeal with a full collection of music along with the ability to translate that reach to hit singles.
Who has the most combined No. 1s on the Billboard 200 and Hot 100?
With the most No. 1s on each ranking (through charts dated May 30, 2026), The Beatles, thus, claim the most leaders on the lists combined: 39, via 20 No. 1s on the Hot 100 and 19 on the Billboard 200. The Fab Four first topped the charts in February 1964, thanks to “I Want To Hold Your Hand” and parent album Meet the Beatles, respectively. The band’s run of Billboard 200 No. 1s stretches through its retrospective 1 in 2000-01.
Sharing the lead among soloists, Taylor Swift sports 29 No. 1s: 15 on the Billboard 200 and 14 on the Hot 100, her haul most recently augmented by The Life of a Showgirl and “Opalite” on the respective rankings. Swift is the only woman, and joined The Beatles and Drake among all acts, with double-digit No. 1s on both rankings.
Though passed by Swift among soloists on the Oct. 18, 2025, charts (via The Life of a Showgirl and “The Fate of Ophelia”), Drake has tied her with 29 combined Billboard 200 (15) and Hot 100 No. 1s (14), thanks to his historic coronations for ICEMAN and “Janice STFU.”
Mariah Carey has posted 25 No. 1s on the charts. She has 19 leaders, the most among soloists, on the Hot 100, and six on the Billboard 200.
Rounding out the top five, Madonna has earned 21 No. 1s on the Billboard 200 and Hot 100 combined, with 12 on the latter and nine on the former.
(Notably, Paul McCartney accounts for a whopping 56 combined Billboard 200 and Hot 100 No. 1s, with The Beatles’ 39 augmented by 17 more by McCartney solo, including his output with Wings.)
Below, browse the list of the superstars with the most combined No. 1s on the Billboard 200, which began with the survey dated March 24, 1956, and the Hot 100, which premiered with the edition dated Aug. 4, 1958.
