Music

Bad Bunny Takes Control of Latin Year-End Charts: Countdown to Billboard’s 2025 Year-End Charts

We’re counting down the days to the full unveiling of Billboard‘s 2025 year-end charts on Tuesday with a special look at select rankings in the lead-up to the big reveal — and today, we’re bringing you two of the Latin year-end chart top 10s.

On Tuesday, hundreds of year-end charts will be posted on Billboard’s website, following the conclusion of the Billboard 2025 No. 1s Livestream, hosted by Druski, which will broadcast on the Billboard News YouTube channel and BillboardTV on Samsung TV Plus starting at noon ET/9 a.m. PT, as special surprise guests stop by to celebrate the year in chart-toppers.

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Today, we’re dropping the top 10 of the 2025 Top Latin Albums and Hot Latin Songs charts below – and both are led by Bad Bunny.

He leads the former with DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS, while the album’s “DtMF” crowns the latter roundup. DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS debuted atop the weekly Top Latin Albums chart (dated Jan. 18, 2025) and remained at No. 1 on the weekly chart every week (save for three) through the end of the 2025 chart year (which ran from Oct. 26, 2024, through Oct. 18, 2025). As for “DtMF,” it debuted at No. 5 on the weekly Hot Latin Songs chart (dated Jan. 18, 2025) and then hopped to No. 1 the next week — and then was mostly No. 1 through the rest of the chart year (only stepping away from the top for five weeks in August-September).

Bad Bunny has two of the top 10 on the year-end Top Latin Albums ranking, along with six of the top 10 on the year-end Hot Latin Songs roundup (including an eye-popping number in the top five).

For the top 10 of both lists, scroll below. The full depth of both rankings (beyond the top 10 of each) will be posted Dec. 9 alongside the complete menu of Billboard’s 2025 year-end charts.

Billboard’s year-end music charts represent aggregated metrics for each artist, title, label and music contributor on the weekly charts from Oct. 26, 2024, through Oct. 18, 2025. Rankings for Luminate-based recaps reflect equivalent album units, airplay, sales or streaming during the weeks that the entries appeared on a respective chart during the tracking year. Any activity registered before or after a title’s chart run isn’t considered in these rankings. That methodology detail, and the October-October time period, account for some of the difference between these lists and the calendar-year recaps that are independently compiled by Luminate.

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