Drake’s ICEMAN stays No. 1 for fourth straight week

ICEMAN stays – Drake’s “ICEMAN” holds the top spot on the Billboard 200 for a fourth week, earning 133,000 equivalent album units in the week ending June 11. The new June 20 chart also brings Malcolm Todd’s first top 10 with “Do That Again” and Niall Horan’s fourth top 10 wi
Drake’s “ICEMAN” didn’t just hit No. 1 — it stayed there.
For a fourth straight week, the album remains atop the Billboard 200, on the chart dated June 20. In the United States, it earned 133,000 equivalent album units in the week ending June 11, a decline of 22%.
That kind of staying power is rare. “ICEMAN” is the first album to spend its first four weeks at No. 1 since Taylor Swift’s “The Life of a Showgirl” managed its first seven weeks atop the list (from charts dated Oct. 18 through Nov. 29, 2025). Before “ICEMAN,” the last R&B/hip-hop album to reach No. 1 for its first four weeks was Travis Scott’s “Utopia,” which also logged its first four weeks at No. 1 (Aug. 12 through Sept. 2, 2023).
Drake has now put 15 albums at No. 1 in total. Only three of them have spent more weeks at the top than “ICEMAN.” Views leads with 13 weeks at No. 1 in 2016, while Scorpion (2018) and Certified Lover Boy (2021) each had five weeks at No. 1.
Behind Drake, the top 10 is mostly stable. Ella Langley’s “Dandelion” stays put at No. 2 with 87,000 equivalent album units, down 7%. Morgan Wallen’s “I’m the Problem” remains No. 3 with 79,000, down 4%. Noah Kahan’s “The Great Divide” holds No. 4 with a little more than 67,000, down 14%.
The biggest movement comes from Malcolm Todd, who enters the top 10 for the first time. His album “Do That Again” debuts at No. 5 with 67,000 equivalent album units. Streaming makes up 37. 000 of that total. tied to 39.49 million on-demand official streams of the album’s songs; the set also debuts at No. 8 on Top Streaming Albums. Album sales contribute 30,000, and TEA accounts for the rest. The first-week sales surge was supported by the album’s availability across six vinyl variants (including two signed) and two CD editions (including one signed).
Todd’s rise didn’t start with a top 10 album. His first Billboard chart hit came with “Chest Pain (I Love). ” which debuted on Hot Rock & Alternative Songs in December 2024 and eventually peaked at No. 10 the following April. Lifted from his 2024 self-titled debut album. the song also became his first hit on the all-genre Billboard Hot 100. debuting on the list in April 2025. In 2026 so far. Todd has logged four debuts on the Hot 100 — with two songs from the new album (“Breathe” and “I Saw Your Face”) and two from Sweet Boy (the title track and “Earrings”).
On the Billboard 200, Todd’s self-titled set reached No. 49 in August 2025. Sweet Boy debuted this January and hit the top 40 in May.
While the album is settling into the rankings, Todd is already turning the page to live dates. During the release week, he announced his 2026 North American tour, set to launch on Sept. 2 in Irving, Texas, with dates through October. Before the tour begins, he’ll play Osheaga Music & Arts Festival in Montreal on Aug. 1 and Outside Lands Music Festival in San Francisco on Aug. 8.
Niall Horan also claims top-10 traction. “Dinner Party” begins at No. 7 with 55,000 equivalent album units. Album sales account for 48,000, and it debuts at No. 1 on Top Album Sales. SEA units total 7. 000. tied to 6.97 million on-demand official streams of the album’s songs. while TEA units make up the remainder. Like Todd. physical formats played a role: “Dinner Party” first-week sales were boosted by its availability across more than 15 physical variants on vinyl. CD and cassette. including multiple signed editions.
Horan has been here before on the Billboard 200. His previous top-10 visits were The Show (No. 2 in 2023), Heartbreak Weather (No. 4 in 2020) and Flicker (No. 1 in 2017). “Dinner Party” is also the fourth top-10 new-album appearance for a One Direction member in 2026 — following Zayn (Konnakol, No. 18 in May), Harry Styles (Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally., No. 1 in March) and Louis Tomlinson (How Did I Get Here?, No. 16 in February).
Live plans are already locked in for Horan as well: he’ll play a pair of co-headlining stadium shows with Thomas Rhett in Nashville on July 9 and in Hershey. Penn. on July 18. Then his “Dinner Party Live on Tour” begins on Sept. 22 in Birmingham, England, moving through Europe and Australia before coming to the U.S. next March.
Further down the top 10, Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” stays at No. 6 with a little more than 55,000 equivalent album units, down 10%. “Jackson’s Number Ones” slides from No. 7-8 with 51,000, down 10%, and Wallen’s former leader “One Thing at a Time” dips from 8-9 with 40,000, down 3%. Olivia Dean’s “The Art of Loving” climbs from 14-10 with 35,000, down 2%.
In the background of every week of rankings is the chart math itself. The Billboard 200 measures the most popular albums of the week in the U.S. using multi-metric consumption measured in equivalent album units, compiled by Luminate. Those units combine album sales, track equivalent albums (TEA) and streaming equivalent albums (SEA). One unit equals one album sale. or 10 individual tracks sold from an album. or 2. 500 ad-supported or 1. 000 paid/subscription on-demand official audio and video streams generated by songs from an album.
For “ICEMAN,” 133,000 equivalent album units in the latest tracking week break down heavily into streaming. SEA units comprise 132,000, down 22%, which equates to 135.82 million on-demand official streams of the set’s tracks. The album is also at No. 1 for a fourth week on Top Streaming Albums. Album sales are just under 500, down 43%, and TEA units make up the remainder, down 27%.
Luminate. the independent data provider to the Billboard charts. completes a thorough review of all data submissions used in compiling the weekly chart rankings. Luminate reviews and authenticates data; data deemed suspicious or unverifiable is removed using established criteria. before final chart calculations are made and published.
The new June 20, 2026-dated Billboard 200 chart will be posted in full on Billboard’s website on June 16.
Drake ICEMAN Billboard 200 Luminate Malcolm Todd Do That Again Niall Horan Dinner Party chart
Billboard charts are rigged, sorry.
So it stayed #1 for like a month?? I don’t even listen to Drake like that but my cousin keeps saying it’s the only thing people play in the gym. 133,000 units sounds fake though, like how is that counted?
Wait Taylor Swift had an album called “The Life of a Showgirl”? I thought she was the one with the “Eras” stuff lol. Also Malcolm Todd getting a first top 10 is cool but I’m confused why the article keeps saying Drake’s name like it’s a whole chart strategy. The 22% decline part makes me think it won’t last next week.
I swear this is why I can’t find anything new on streaming, everything just sits at #1. “ICEMAN” staying there 4 straight weeks like that is kinda insane. And they’re comparing it to Travis Scott and Taylor Swift like that means it’s automatically the best album?? Also Niall Horan top 10 like that just random, different genres don’t usually mix on the chart but here we are.