Global Chart
Report
----------------------------------
Bad Bunny's
'DtMF' tops second week
Sunday, February 22, 2026
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
After his great
performances at the 68th Annual
Grammy Awards at the Crypto.com
Arena in Los Angeles on February 1,
2026, and at the Super Bowl LX
halftime show at Levis' Stadium in
Santa Clara, California, on February
8, 2026, Bad Bunny continues to be
extremely successful on the
international charts. There are
still eight of his
songs on this week's Global Top 40,
four
of it inside the Top 10. The title song from his last
album 'Debí´Tirar Más Fotos' reigns
a second week at the top position
globally with another 316,000
points, a 23% decline compared to
the previous week. Broken down by
sectors 'DtMF' gets 275,000 points
by streaming (down 22%), 33,000
points by sales (down 33%, and 8,000
points by airplay (up 16%).
Initially the song peaked at no.3 in
January 2025 and returned in
December of that year, made a big
jump a fortnight ago after the
Grammy-Awards from no.32 to no.9.
Last week, after the Super Bowl LX
halftime show, it shot to
the pole position of
the Global Track Chart. Behind
'DtMF' are 'Baile Inolvidable'
at no.5 with 229,000
points (down 18%), 'Nuevayol' at no.6 with
222,000 points (down 16%), and 'Tití
Me Preguntó' at no.10 with 208,000
points (up 18%). Taylor Swift's
'Opalite' succeedes a tremendous
leap from no.10 to the runner-up
slot. Driven by a renewed sales
boost the track gets 271,000 points
this week (up 33% with 82,000 points
by streaming, 131,000 points by
sales, and 58,000 points by
airplay). It's the highest position
for that song since its start at
no.2 with 439,000 points in the
calendar week 42, 2025. Taylor's
other big smash, 'The Fate Of Ophelia', slips
shy behind at no.3 with 266,000
points (down 7% with
152,000 points by streaming, 31,000 points by sales, and
83,000 points by airplay). The only
new addition on this week's Top 40
is 'Homewrecker', the new track by
American singer / songwriter Shane
Michael Boose, known professionally
as Sombr. The song started at no.41
last week and enters the Top 40 this
week at no.25 with 101,000 points.
Outside
our current Top 40 waiting among
other 'No Batidâo' by Zxkai &
Slxughter at no.45, 'Jetski' by
Pedro Sampaio | Mc Meno K | Melody at
no.49, and 'Gone Gone Gone' by David
Guetta | Teddy Swims | Tones And I
at no.51 for their first appearance on
the hitlist. Bad Bunny rules also
the current Global Album Chart again, his
last album 'Debí´Tirar Más Fotos',
released in January 2025, rules the
tally for a third non-consecutive
week with
216,000 equivalent sales, down 39% compared
to the previous week (with 175,000
points by streaming + 41,000 points
by sales). The album started at no.3
in the calendar week 3, 2025 with
126,000 consumption units and peaked
at no.1 a week later with 215,000 sales.
Since then, the album has remained
in the charts continuously and
achieved its highest sales result
last week with 353,000 consumption
units. South Korean boy group Ateez
follows still at the runner-up slot
with their thirteenth extended play
'Golden Hour: Part 4' and another
healthy 210,000 equivalent
sales (down 38% with 5,000 points by streaming +
205,000 points by sales). Olivia
Dean's 'The Art Of Loving' rounds
out the top three with 107,000 units
(down a minor 0,3% with 83,000
points by streaming + 24,000 points
by sales). And now, as every week, additional
stats from outside the current
Global Album Top 20 in alphabetic
order. The first figure means last
week's sales, the second figure the
total sales: '1989' by Taylor Swift
18,000 / 17,297,000, '1989 (Taylor's
Version)' by Taylor Swift 12,000 /
7,456,000, '21' by Adele 12,000 /
34,321,000, '25' by Adele 9,000 /
26,062,000, '30' by Adele 8,000 /
7,195,000, 'After Hours' by The
Weeknd 25,000 / 11,961,000,
'Borondo' by Beéle 27,000 /
1,683,000, 'Brat' by Charli XCX
18,000 / 4,489,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 9,000 / 2,401,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 19,000 / 22,735,000,
'Eternal Sunshine' by Ariana Grande
27,000 / 5,419,000, 'Evermore' by
Taylor Swift 9,000 / 7,049,000,
'Fireworks & Rollerblades' by Benson
Boone 17,000 / 4,075,000, 'Folklore'
by Taylor Swift 23,000 / 13,056,000,
'Future Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa
16,000 / 10,237,000, 'GNX' by
Kendrick Lamar 24,000 / 4,105,000,
'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo 18,000 /
5,657,000, 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' by
The Weeknd 20,000 / 2,776,000, 'I've
Tried Everything But Therapy' by
Teddy Swims 24,000 / 4,246,000,
'Lux' by Rosalíá 19,000 /
732,000, 'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
34,000 / 3,036,000, 'Midnights' by
Taylor Swift 16,000 / 13,345,000,
'One Thing At A Time' by Morgan
Wallen 26,000 / 10,341,000, 'Red
(Taylor's Version)' by Taylor Swift
9,000 / 7,125,000, 'Rosie' by Rosé
13,000 / 2,465,000, 'Ruby' by Jennie
17,000 / 1,915,000, 'Short n' Sweet'
by Sabrina Carpenter 53,000 /
6,833,000, 'Starboy' by The
Weeknd 31,000 / 10,409,000, 'Stick
Season' by Noah Kahan 47,000 /
6,263,000, 'Swag' by Justin Bieber
32.000 / 1,767,000, 'The Highlights'
by The Weeknd 26,000 / 10,801,000,
'The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest
Princess' by Chappell Roan 27,000 /
4,829,000, 'The Secret Of Us' by
Gracie Abrams 26,000 / 4,070,000,
'The Tortured Poets Department' by
Taylor Swift 34,000 / 11,841,000,
'Tropicoqueta' by Karol G 23,000 /
1,393,000, and 'When We All Fall
Asleep, Where Do We Go?' by Billie
Eilish 14,000 / 13,372,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 10
YEARS AGO
...
"Love
Yourself"
is the third single and the second number one smash from
Justin Bieber's
fourth studio album Purpose
and was released on November9,
2015. For
several weeks all three singles (incl. "What Do You Mean?" and "Sorry")
ranked in the top five of the Global Track Chart simultaneously. "Love
Yourself" is a sparingly instrumented ballad about a broken
relationship. It went to the No.1 position in the United States, United Kingdom,
Australia, Netherlands, Sweden, New Zealand, Ireland, and Denmark. In
Germany the song stranded at no.3, in France at no.4.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
'Opalite' shines as Taylor
Swift's 14th No.1
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Swift ties Rihanna for the
third-most Hot 100 No. 1s,
after only The Beatles (20)
and Mariah Carey (19),
dating to the chart’s start.
“Opalite” is Swift’s ninth
No. 1 since 2020, extending
her
mark for the most this
decade. “Opalite” tops the
Hot 100 (after initially
peaking at No. 2 upon its
October debut) sparked by a
surge of physical sales that
shipped to consumers and new
remixes released during the
tracking week. Earlier in
February, its official video
premiered. “Opalite” drew
11.4 million official
streams (down 20% week over
week) and 58.9 million radio
airplay audience impressions
(up 17%) and sold 168,000
(up 2,290%) in the U.S. Feb.
13-19. The single falls
11-17 on the Streaming Songs chart,
after reaching No. 2 upon
its debut (it soared by 70%
in streams a week ago after
the Feb. 6 arrival of its
video); jumps 7-3 for a new
high on Radio Songs; and
blasts 7-1 on Digital Song
Sales,
where it becomes Swift’s
record-extending 31st
leader. Of the 168,000 sales
for “Opalite” Feb. 13-19,
144,000 were physical (six
CD singles, including for
each of its remixes, and one
vinyl version) and 24,000,
digital. The song claims the
highest overall weekly
sales since Jason Aldean’s
“Try That in a Small Town”
(175,000; Aug. 5, 2023) and
the top physical total since
Travis Scott’s “4X4”
(165,000; Feb. 8, 2025).
Bruno Mars’ “I Just Might,”
up 10-6 after it spent its
first two weeks on the Hot
100 at No. 1 in January,
climbs 2-1 on Radio Songs
(65.3 million, up 7%). He
lands his 11th airplay
leader, matching Mariah
Carey for the second-most
since the chart began in
December 1990, after
Rihanna’s 13. Ella Langley’s
“Choosin’ Texas” rebounds
4-2 two weeks after it
became her first Hot 100 No.
1. Olivia Dean’s “Man I
Need” holds at No. 3 after
reaching No. 2 on the Hot
100. Notably, thanks to
Swift, Langley and Dean,
three solo women rank Nos.
1, 2 and 3 for the first
time since the chart dated
Nov. 4, 2023, which Swift
also led, with “Cruel
Summer,” followed, in order,
by Doja Cat’s “Paint the
Town Red” and SZA’s
“Snooze.” Bad Bunny’s “DtMF”
drops to No. 4 on the Hot
100 a week after it hit No.
1. He boasts three songs in
the Hot 100’s top 10, as
“Tití Me Preguntó” descends
7-9, after reaching No. 5,
and “Baile Inolvidable”
recedes to No. 10 from its
No. 2 high. Alex Warren’s
“Ordinary” lifts 6-5 on the
Hot 100 after 10 weeks at
No. 1 beginning last June.
Also in the Hot 100’s top
10, Humtr/x’s “Golden” rises
9-7, after eight weeks at
No. 1 starting in August,
and Swift’s “The Fate of
Ophelia” rebounds 12-8.
Bad Bunny’s
DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS returns
to No. 1 on the Billboard
200 albums chart for a fifth
nonconsecutive week on top,
rising a spot to lead the
Feb. 28-dated chart. The
ascent comes after the 2025
set spent two weeks in the
runner-up slot following his
Super Bowl halftime show
performance (Feb. 8), a week
after its win for album of
the year at the Grammy
Awards (Feb. 1). Bad Bunny’s
14-Minute Super Bowl
Halftime Medley Debuts on 3
Billboard Charts. In the
tracking week ending Feb.
19, the effort earned
135,000 equivalent album
units in the United States,
according to Luminate (down
46%). The album reached No.
1 in its second week (and
first full tracking week) on
the list, dated Jan. 25,
2025, and then spent the
next two weeks at No. 1. It
returned to the top for a
fourth week (May 17),
following its initial vinyl
release. Of DeBÍ TiRAR MáS
FOToS’s 135,000 equivalent
album units earned in the
latest tracking week, SEA
units comprise 106,000 (down
43%, equaling 112.54 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s tracks; it
holds at No. 1 on Top
Streaming Albums for a sixth
nonconsecutive week), album
sales comprise 28,000 (it
climbs 3-1 on Top Album
Sales for its second week
atop the list) and TEA units
comprise 1,000. After
debuting at No. 1 a week
ago, J.
Cole’s
The Fall-Off slips to No. 2
with 81,000 equivalent album
units earned (down 71%).
Don Toliver’s
former leader, Octane, rises
4-3 (79,000, down 19%) and
Morgan Wallen’s
likewise chart-topping I’m
the Problem climbs 7-4
(77,000, up less than 1%).
Olivia Dean’s
The Art of Loving rounds out
the top five, stepping 8-5
(72,000, down 5%).
Brent Faiyaz notches
his second top 10-charting
project on the Billboard 200
as Icon arrives at No. 6
with 58,000 equivalent album
units earned. Of that sum,
SEA units comprise 44,500
(equaling 45.7 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs; it
debuts at No. 7 on Top
Streaming Albums), album
sales comprise 13,500 (his
best sales week; it debuts
at No. 5 on Top Album Sales)
and TEA units comprise a
negligible sum. The album’s
first-week sales were
boosted by the availability
of signed editions on
Faiyaz’s webstore.
Bad Bunny’s
former No. 1 Un Verano Sin
Ti, from 2022, slips a spot
to No. 7 on the latest
Billboard 200 with 52,000
equivalent album units
earned (down 35%).
Charli XCX arrives
at No. 8 with her soundtrack
to the film Wuthering
Heights, garnering the
singer-songwriter her third
top 10 album. The set debuts
with 51,000 equivalent album
units earned. Of that sum,
album sales comprise 26,000
(it debuts at No. 3 on Top
Album Sales), SEA units
comprise 25,000 (equaling
24.85 million on-demand
official streams of the
set’s tracks; it debuts at
No. 19 on Top Streaming
Albums) and TEA units
comprise a negligible sum.
Of the set’s first-week
sales, 72% came from vinyl
purchases (across two
variants). The film
Wuthering Heights, directed
by Emerald Fennell and
starring Margot Robbie and
Jacob Elordi, was released
in U.S. movie theaters on
Feb. 13. Closing out the top
10 of the latest Billboard
200 are two former No. 1s:
Taylor Swift’s
The Life of a Showgirl is
steady at No. 9 (50,000
equivalent album units, down
7%) and the
KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack
is a non-mover at No. 10
(40,000, down 4%).
Record Of The Month
'I Just Might' by Bruno Mars
is the first big global
release of 2026
and also the first sign of
his new album 'The
Romantic', available
February 27.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
The collab 'Rein Me In'
reaches number one
Monday, February 23, 2026
by Alan Jones, London
No.2 to The Fate Of Ophelia
on debut as an album track
from The Life Of A Showgirl
last October, Opalite
responds to its new status
as a single by exploding
15-1, with consumption
growing 157.88% to 47,509
units. It was a hard-won
victory for the Taylor Swift
track, which trailed former
incumbent Raindance
Up agaach other for the 2026 Brit Awards in
the categories British Artist Of The Year and British Album Of The Year
a week tomorrow (February 28), Sam Fender & Olivia Dean are also jointly
nominated for Song Of The Year with their collaboration Rein Me In,
which sets up the ceremony nicely by jumping 5-1 this week.
Fender’s first No.1 and Dean’s second, it was
originally a solo track on Fender’s latest album, People Watching, with
Dean adding vocals to a version included on the deluxe edition of the
album. Previously uncharted, the track sprang into life as soon as the
duet version was released, and sets a new chart record this week by
reaching No.1 on its 35th consecutive week in the chart.
After debuting at No.6 last June, it has been in
the Top 40 ever since, never falling below No.34. Hitherto, the record
for most consecutive weeks in the Top 75 before reaching No.1 is 19, set
by Ed Sheeran’s Thinking Out Loud in 2014. Among non-
consecutive runs,
Mariah Carey’s 1994 release All I Want For Christmas Is You topped the
chart on its 104th appearance in 2020, while Running Up That Hill, Kate
Bush’s 1985 single that took more than 36 years before reaching the apex
in 2022.
Increasing consumption week-on-week by 15.13% to
43,425 units (six 7-inch vinyl, 440 digital downloads and 42,979
sales-equivalent streams) – its highest weekly tally yet but the lowest
for a No.1 for 29 weeks - as it moved to the top of the chart, Rein Me
In actually trailed in the week’s first sales flashes to Dean’s So Easy
(To Fall In Love), following the latter’s release on heart-shaped red
vinyl for Valentine’s Day. The vinyl eventually contributed 2,738 sales,
helping So Easy (To Fall In Love) to jump 6-2 (38,504 sales), surpassing
the No.3 peak it reached 12 weeks ago.
Completing a notable treble, Man I Need – which
became her first No.1 20 weeks ago – glides 8-4 (29,755 sales), giving
Dean three songs in the Top 5 simultaneously for the first time, while
achieving its highest position for 12 weeks. Its placing on the main
chart affected by the fact it is on ACR, it is No.1 on the Top 200
Combined Tracks chart – where ACR and primary artist rules don’t exist -
for the 10th time, on consumption of 58,889 units. That is its record
25th straight week above 50,000.
Of course, Dean’s charge this week – and the 7-3
jump (34,746 sales) of Zara Larsson’s viral Lush Life to equal its 2016
peak albeit – is a serendipitous side-effect of the demise of last
week’s top three, with Raindance (2-11, 20,725 sales) by Dave & Tems and
Where Is My Husband! (3-12, 20,367 sales) by Raye newly relegated to ACR
and exiting the Top 10, and Taylor Swift’s Opalite (1-8, 27,527 sales)
suffering from a big dip in physical sales from 11,118 to 22, after
stocks of its limited vinyl and CD editions were exhausted. Opalite did,
however, benefit towards the end of the week from the release of no
fewer than four remixes – by Chris Lake, Skream, Bunt and Ely Oaks –
which helped to raise its digital downloads tally 59.04% week-on-week to
1,692 units, and also impacted its streams.
The effects of his Grammy and Super Bowl
performances both waning, Bad Bunny still has three songs in the chart,
namely DTMF (4-5, 29,646 sales), Nuevavol (15-16, 18,273 sales) and –
charting for the first time – his 2022 song Tití Me Preguntó (No.18,
17,583 sales), which replaces Baile Inolvidable as his third track under
primary artist rules, as the latter track achieves lower consumption
(12,662 units). Tití Me Preguntó is Bad Bunny’s eighth hit and despite
not charting before is his fifth most-consumed title with a to-date
tally of 239,498 units.
Sombr’s new song, Homewrecker, debuted at No.14
last week, and now moves up to No.7 (27,848 sales) to become his fourth
Top 10 hit.
Completing the Top 10, I Just Might (9-6, 28,424
sales) rebounds for Bruno Mars, Stateside (10-9, 25,459 sales) reaches a
new peak for PinkPantheress, and Aperture (12-10, 21,476 sales) regains
Top 10 status for Harry Styles.
Overall singles consumption is down 0.04% week-on-week to 31,541,829
units, 3.71% above same week 2025 sales of 30,414,262 units. Paid-for
sales are down 7.03% week-on-week at 254,800, 0.82% above same week 2025
sales of 252,719.
The Brat is back! – soundtracking Emerald
Fennell’s new cinematic adaptation of Emily Brontë’s
critically-acclaimed and only novel Wuthering Heights, Charli XCX’s
album of the same name debuts at No.1 on consumption of 21,071 units
(4,462 CDs, 7,713 vinyl albums, 328 cassettes, 488 digital downloads and
8,080 sales-equivalent streams).
Delivering XCX’s eighth chart album – all of which
have made the Top 40 – it consists of a dozen pop/rock tracks, all
co-authored with producer Finn Keane. It secures XCX’s third No.1 album,
following Crash, which debuted at No.1 in 2022 on consumption of 16,117
units; and Brat, which was No.2 on debut in 2024 on consumption of
27,234 units, and reached No.1 18 weeks later on consumption of 35,949
units, following the release of an expanded Brat And It’s Completely
Different But Also Still Brat edition.
The Essential Michael Jackson was absent from the
chart on a technicality a fortnight ago, when his Number Ones
compilation replaced it in the Top 10, but it returned to the top tier
itself last week, and now jumps 8-6 (7,180 sales), achieving its highest
chart position for 861 weeks – more than 16 years.
Another compilation – Fleetwood Mac’s 2018 set 50
Years: Don’t Stop – climbs 4-3 (8,563 sales), revisiting the peak it
first climbed five weeks ago, although it has achieved higher
consumption in 12 prior weeks.
The rest of the Top 10: The Highlights (5-4, 7,316
sales) by The Weeknd, Debí Tirar Más Fotos (2-5, 7,231 sales) by Bad
Bunny, +-=÷× Tour Collection (10-7, 6,674 sales) by Ed Sheeran, Man’s
Best Friend (7-8, 6,357 sales) by Sabrina Carpenter, You’ll Be Alright
Kid (9-9, 6,049 sales) by Alex Warren and Short N’ Sweet (13-10, 5,559
sales) by Sabrina Carpenter.
Overall album sales are down 0.05% week-on-week at 2,550,039 units,
1.84% below same week 2025 sales of 2,597,777. Physical product accounts
for 301,393 sales, 11.82% of the total.