This is a list of songs that reached the top 10 on the Billboard Mainstream Top 40 (or Pop Airplay) chart in 2020.
Top ten entry date | Single | Artist(s) | Peak | Peak date | Weeks in top ten | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singles from 2019 | ||||||
November 16 | "Memories" | Maroon 5 | 1 | February 8 | 18 | [1] [2] |
November 30 | "Lose You to Love Me" | Selena Gomez | 2 | January 18 | 15 | [3] [4] |
December 14 | "Panini" | Lil Nas X | 6 | January 4 | 7 | [5] [6] |
December 28 | "Dance Monkey" | Tones and I | 6 | January 18 | 13 | [7] [4] |
Singles from 2020 | ||||||
January 4 | "Don't Start Now" | Dua Lipa | 1 | February 22 | 27 | [6] [8] |
January 18 | "Roxanne" | Arizona Zervas | 2 | March 14 | 13 | [4] [9] |
January 25 | "10,000 Hours" | Dan + Shay and Justin Bieber | 9 | February 1 | 2 | [10] [11] |
February 1 | "Heartless" | The Weeknd | 5 | March 7 | 10 | [11] [12] |
February 8 | "Hot Girl Bummer" | Blackbear | 2 | March 28 | 13 | [2] [13] |
February 22 | "Everything I Wanted" | Billie Eilish | 5 | April 4 | 13 | [8] [14] |
February 29 | "Adore You" | Harry Styles | 1 | April 11 | 32 | [15] [16] |
March 14 | "Blinding Lights" | The Weeknd | 1 | April 18 | 39 | [9] [17] |
March 21 | "My Oh My" | Camila Cabello featuring DaBaby | 1 | May 9 | 12 | [18] [19] |
March 28 | "Intentions" | Justin Bieber featuring Quavo | 1 | June 27 | 16 | [13] [20] |
April 4 | "Say So" | Doja Cat | 1 | May 16 | 18 | [14] [21] |
April 18 | "Ritmo (Bad Boys for Life)" | Black Eyed Peas and J Balvin | 8 | May 23 | 8 | [17] [22] |
May 9 | "Falling" | Trevor Daniel | 1 | July 25 | 13 | [19] [23] |
May 23 | "Break My Heart" | Dua Lipa | 1 | August 1 | 22 | [22] [24] |
June 6 | "Toosie Slide" | Drake | 10 | June 6 | 1 | [25] |
June 13 | "Roses (Imanbek remix)" | Saint Jhn | 4 | August 1 | 15 | [26] [24] |
"Sunday Best" | Surfaces | 9 | June 20 | 5 | [26] [27] | |
June 20 | "Savage" | Megan Thee Stallion featuring Beyonce | 7 | July 18 | 8 | [27] [28] |
July 11 | "Watermelon Sugar" | Harry Styles | 1 | August 8 | 20 | [29] [30] |
July 18 | "Before You Go" | Lewis Capaldi | 1 | September 26 | 19 | [28] [31] |
July 25 | "Rain on Me" | Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande | 10 | July 25 | 2 | [25] |
August 8 | "Supalonely" | Benee featuring Gus Dapperton | 7 | August 8 | 5 | [30] |
"Death Bed" | Powfu featuring Beabadoobee | 8 | August 8 | 5 | [30] | |
"Rockstar" | DaBaby featuring Roddy Ricch | 4 | September 26 | 13 | [30] [31] | |
August 15 | "Savage Love (Laxed - Siren Beat)" | Jawsh 685 and Jason Derulo | 1 | October 3 | 16 | [32] [33] |
September 12 | "I Hope" | Gabby Barrett featuring Charlie Puth | 3 | December 5 | 16 | [34] [35] |
"If the World Was Ending" | JP Saxe featuring Julia Michaels | 9 | September 12 | 6 | [34] | |
September 26 | "ILY (I Love You Baby)" | Surf Mesa featuring Emilee | 2 | November 7 | 13 | [31] [36] |
October 10 | "Mood" | 24kGoldn featuring Iann Dior | 1 | October 31 | 28 | [37] [38] |
October 24 | "Kings & Queens" | Ava Max | 2 | November 28 | 15 | [39] [40] |
"Come & Go" | Juice WRLD and Marshmello | 10 | October 24 | 2 | [39] | |
November 7 | "Dynamite" | BTS | 5 | December 19 | 7 | [36] [41] |
"Holy" | Justin Bieber featuring Chance the Rapper | 3 | December 26 | 15 | [36] [42] | |
November 28 | "Be Like That" | Kane Brown with Swae Lee and Khalid | 8 | November 28 | 3 | [40] |
"Positions" | Ariana Grande | 1 | December 26 | 27 | [40] [42] | |
December 12 | "Bang!" | AJR | 6 | December 26 | 9 | [43] [42] |
December 19 | "Laugh Now Cry Later" | Drake featuring Lil Durk | 7 | December 26 | 5 | [41] [42] |
Top ten entry date | Single | Artist(s) | Peak | Peak date | Weeks in top ten | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
September 14 | "Someone You Loved" | Lewis Capaldi | 1 | October 26 | 23 | [44] [45] |
September 28 | "Only Human" | Jonas Brothers | 3 | November 16 | 15 | [46] [1] |
October 12 | "Circles" | Post Malone | 1 | November 16 | 35 | [47] [1] |
"Trampoline" | Shaed | 4 | December 7 | 15 | [47] [48] | |
October 26 | "Good as Hell" | Lizzo | 1 | November 30 | 18 | [45] [3] |
December 21 | "Graveyard" | Halsey | 10 | December 21 | 3 | [49] |
Top ten entry date | Single | Artist(s) | Peak | Peak date | Weeks in top ten | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
December 5 | "Levitating" | Dua Lipa featuring DaBaby | 4 | January 16 | 13 | [35] [50] |
December 26 | "Go Crazy" | Chris Brown and Young Thug | 3 | February 20 | 14 | [42] [51] |
"Lonely" | Justin Bieber and Benny Blanco | 2 | February 13 | 11 | [42] [52] |
Alternative Airplay is a music chart in the United States that has appeared in Billboard magazine since September 10, 1988. It ranks the 40 most-played songs on alternative and modern rock radio stations. Introduced as Modern Rock Tracks, the chart served as a companion to the Mainstream Rock chart, and its creation was prompted by the explosion of alternative music on American radio in the late 1980s. During the first several years of the chart, it regularly featured music that did not receive commercial radio airplay anywhere but on a few modern rock and college rock radio stations. This included many electronic and post-punk artists. Gradually, as alternative rock became more mainstream, alternative and mainstream rock radio stations began playing many of the same songs. By the late 2000s, the genres became more fully differentiated with only limited crossover. The Alternative Airplay chart features more alternative rock, indie pop, and pop punk artists while the Mainstream Rock chart leans towards more guitar-tinged blues rock, hard rock, and heavy metal.
"Iris" is a song by American alternative rock band Goo Goo Dolls. Originally written for the soundtrack of the 1998 film City of Angels, the song was later included on the band's sixth album, Dizzy Up the Girl. The song was released as a single on April 1, 1998.
The Pop 100 was a songs chart that debuted in February 2005 and was released weekly by Billboard magazine in the United States until its discontinuation in 2009. It ranked songs based on airplay on Mainstream Top 40 radio stations, singles sales and digital downloads.
The Radio Songs chart is released weekly by Billboard magazine and measures the airplay of songs being played on radio stations throughout the United States across all musical genres. It is one of the three components, along with sales and streaming activity, that determine the chart positions of songs on the Billboard Hot 100.
"Fly" is a song by American rock band Sugar Ray. It appears on their 1997 album Floored twice: one version with reggae artist Super Cat and the other without. The song was serviced to US radio in May 1997.
"One Headlight" is a song by American rock band the Wallflowers. The song was written by lead singer Jakob Dylan, and produced by T-Bone Burnett. It was released in January 1997 as the second single from the band's second studio album, Bringing Down the Horse (1996).
The following article documents the album, single, video and multimedia releases by the American rock band the Goo Goo Dolls.
American rock band Aerosmith has released 72 singles. Some of their singles have been officially released to the public, while others have been released as album cuts only to radio. Twenty-one of their songs have reached the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 and the band has long been a stalwart of the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, achieving nine number-one hits on that chart to date. An additional 28 of the band's songs have reached the Top 40 on various charts worldwide. The band has achieved four multi-platinum singles, while an additional eight singles have attained silver, gold, or platinum certifications in various territories. The band has certified sales of 16.5 million singles in the United States.
"Use Somebody" is a song recorded by the American rock group Kings of Leon. It was the second single from the band's fourth studio album Only by the Night, and it entered American and British charts in early October 2008, three weeks after the album release. The single was augmented with a music video released a month later.
The Adult Pop Airplay chart is published weekly by Billboard magazine and ranks "the most popular adult top 40 as based on radio airplay detections measured by Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems."
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 U.S.' 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 "Paint the Town Red" by Doja Cat.