This is a list of singles that charted in the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100, an all-genre singles chart in the United States, in 2024.
An asterisk (*) represents that a single is in the top ten as of the issue dated for the week of May 18, 2024. [1]
Key
Top ten entry date | Single | Artist(s) | Peak | Peak date | Weeks in top ten | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singles from 2023 | ||||||
November 25 | "Greedy" [A] | Tate McRae | 3 | January 13 | 15 | [2] [3] |
December 2 | "Water" [A] | Tyla | 7 | January 13 | 3 | [4] [3] |
Singles from 2024 | ||||||
January 13 | "Agora Hills" [B] [D] [E] | Doja Cat | 7 | February 3 | 7 | [3] [5] |
January 20 | "Lose Control" [K] | Teddy Swims | 1 | March 30 | 17* | [6] [7] |
January 27 | "Yes, And?" [F] ↑ | Ariana Grande | 1 | January 27 | 3 | [8] |
"Redrum" ↑ | 21 Savage | 5 | January 27 | 3 | [8] | |
"Née-Nah" ↑ | 21 Savage, Travis Scott and Metro Boomin | 10 | January 27 | 1 | [8] | |
February 10 | "Hiss" ↑ | Megan Thee Stallion | 1 | February 10 | 1 | [9] |
"Beautiful Things" [K] | Benson Boone | 2 | March 30 | 14* | [9] [7] | |
February 24 | "Texas Hold 'Em" [H] ↑ | Beyoncé | 1 | March 2 | 9 | [10] [11] |
"Carnival" ↑ | ¥$: Ye and Ty Dolla Sign featuring Rich the Kid and Playboi Carti | 1 | March 16 | 6 | [10] [12] | |
"Stick Season" [I] | Noah Kahan | 9 | April 27 | 3 | [10] [13] | |
March 9 | "Saturn" [J] ↑ | SZA | 6 | March 9 | 2 | [14] |
March 23 | "We Can't Be Friends (Wait for Your Love)" ↑ | Ariana Grande | 1 | March 23 | 6 | [15] |
"Act II: Date @ 8" | 4Batz featuring Drake | 7 | March 23 | 1 | [15] | |
March 30 | "Enough (Miami)" ↑ | Cardi B | 9 | March 30 | 1 | [7] |
April 6 | "Like That" [K] ↑ | Future, Metro Boomin and Kendrick Lamar | 1 | April 6 | 6* | [16] |
"Type Shit" ↑ | Future, Metro Boomin, Travis Scott and Playboi Carti | 2 | April 6 | 3 | [16] | |
"Too Sweet" [K] ↑ | Hozier | 1 | April 27 | 5 | [16] [13] | |
"Cinderella" ↑ | Future, Metro Boomin and Travis Scott | 6 | April 6 | 1 | [16] | |
"We Don't Trust You" ↑ | Future and Metro Boomin | 8 | April 6 | 1 | [16] | |
"Young Metro" ↑ | Future, Metro Boomin and The Weeknd | 9 | April 6 | 1 | [16] | |
April 13 | "II Most Wanted" ↑ | Beyoncé and Miley Cyrus | 6 | April 13 | 1 | [17] |
"Jolene" ↑ | Beyoncé | 7 | April 13 | 1 | [17] | |
April 20 | "7 Minute Drill" ↑ | J. Cole | 6 | April 20 | 1 | [18] |
April 27 | "Espresso" [K] ↑ | Sabrina Carpenter | 4 | May 11 | 3* | [13] [19] |
May 4 | "Fortnight" ↑ | Taylor Swift featuring Post Malone | 1 | May 4 | 3* | [20] |
"Down Bad" ↑ | Taylor Swift | 2 | May 4 | 2 | [20] | |
"I Can Do It with a Broken Heart" ↑ | 3 | May 4 | 2 | [20] | ||
"The Tortured Poets Department" ↑ | 4 | May 4 | 1 | [20] | ||
"So Long, London" ↑ | 5 | May 4 | 1 | [20] | ||
"My Boy Only Breaks His Favorite Toys" ↑ | 6 | May 4 | 1 | [20] | ||
"But Daddy I Love Him" ↑ | 7 | May 4 | 1 | [20] | ||
"Florida!!!" ↑ | Taylor Swift featuring Florence + the Machine | 8 | May 4 | 1 | [20] | |
"Who's Afraid of Little Old Me?" ↑ | Taylor Swift | 9 | May 4 | 1 | [20] | |
"Guilty as Sin?" ↑ | 10 | May 4 | 1 | [20] | ||
May 11 | "Million Dollar Baby" ↑ | Tommy Richman | 2 | May 11 | 2* | [19] |
"A Bar Song (Tipsy)" | Shaboozey | 3 | May 11 | 2* | [19] | |
May 18 | "Not Like Us" ↑ | Kendrick Lamar | 1 | May 18 | 1* | [21] |
"Euphoria" | 3 | May 18 | 1* | [21] | ||
"Family Matters" ↑ | Drake | 7 | May 18 | 1* | [21] | |
Top ten entry date | Single | Artist(s) | Peak | Peak date | Weeks in top ten | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 28 | "Flowers" [C] ↑ | Miley Cyrus | 1 | January 28 | 29 | [22] |
February 18 | "Last Night" [A] | Morgan Wallen | 1 | March 18 | 41 | [23] [24] |
May 27 | "Fast Car" [A] [C] | Luke Combs | 2 | July 1 | 27 | [25] [26] |
July 15 | "Cruel Summer" [A] [G] | Taylor Swift | 1 | October 28 | 34 | [27] [28] |
August 19 | "Snooze" [A] | SZA | 2 | October 7 | 26 | [29] [30] |
September 2 | "Paint the Town Red" [A] | Doja Cat | 1 | September 16 | 20 | [31] [32] |
September 9 | "I Remember Everything" [A] ↑ | Zach Bryan featuring Kacey Musgraves | 1 | September 9 | 23 | [33] |
November 25 | "Lovin on Me" ↑ | Jack Harlow | 1 | December 2 | 23 | [2] [4] |
Top ten entry date | Single | Artist(s) | Peak | Peak date | Weeks in top ten | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
December 30, 2017 | "All I Want for Christmas Is You" | Mariah Carey | 1 | December 21, 2019 | 32 | [34] [35] |
December 29, 2018 | "It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year" | Andy Williams | 5 | January 2, 2021 | 18 | [36] [37] |
January 5, 2019 | "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" | Brenda Lee | 1 | December 9, 2023 | 26 | [38] [39] |
"Jingle Bell Rock" | Bobby Helms | 3 | January 4, 2020 | 23 | [38] [40] | |
"A Holly Jolly Christmas" | Burl Ives | 4 | January 4, 2020 | 22 | [38] [40] | |
December 19, 2020 | "Feliz Navidad" | José Feliciano | 6 | January 2, 2021 | 9 | [41] [37] |
January 2, 2021 | "Let It Snow, Let It Snow, Let It Snow" | Dean Martin | 7 | January 6, 2024 | 4 | [37] [42] |
"Last Christmas" | Wham! | 4 | January 7, 2023 | 13 | [37] [43] | |
January 1, 2022 | "Sleigh Ride" | The Ronettes | 8 | December 23, 2023 | 4 | [44] [45] |
Artist | Numbers of songs | Longest-running song |
---|---|---|
Taylor Swift | 11 | Cruel Summer |
Metro Boomin | 6 | Like That |
Future | 5 | |
Beyoncé | 3 | Texas Hold 'Em |
Kendrick Lamar | Like That | |
Travis Scott | Type Shit | |
Ariana Grande | 2 | We Can't Be Friends (Wait for Your Love) |
Drake | (tie) Act II: Date @ 8 Family Matters | |
Doja Cat | Paint the Town Red | |
Miley Cyrus | Flowers | |
SZA | Snooze | |
21 Savage | Redrum | |
"All I Want for Christmas Is You" is a song by American singer Mariah Carey from her fourth studio album and first holiday album, Merry Christmas (1994). Written and produced by Carey and Walter Afanasieff, the song was released as the lead single from the album on October 29, 1994, by Columbia Records. The track is an uptempo love song that includes bell chimes, backing vocals, and synthesizers. It has received critical acclaim, with The New Yorker describing it as "one of the few worthy modern additions to the holiday canon". The song has become a Christmas standard, with a significant rise in popularity every December.
The Streaming Songs chart is released weekly by Billboard magazine and lists each week's top streamed radio songs, on-demand songs and videos on leading online music services in the United States. The chart represents one of the three components, along with airplay and sales, that determine the chart positions of songs on the Billboard Hot 100, which ranks the most popular songs in the United States.
The Billboard Global 200 is a weekly record chart published by Billboard magazine. The chart ranks the top songs globally and is based on digital sales and online streaming from over 200 territories worldwide. First announced in mid-2019, it officially launched in September 2020.