Mexico · Week of May 23, 2026
Bad Bunny Reclaims #1 as K-Pop and Global Pop Split Mexico’s Attention
Bad Bunny’s *DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS* returns to the top, but what’s most striking this week is how evenly Mexico’s listening splits between home-region Latin artists and a surge of international pop. The chart divides almost exactly in half: Spanish-language releases at positions #1, #8, and #11—Bad Bunny, Peso Pluma, Rauw Alejandro—versus a wave of English-language and K-pop entries filling the rest. BTS claims #2 with a live recording, Jungkook’s *GOLDEN* sits at #6, and Agust D and Jimin occupy #12 and #18. That’s four K-pop albums in the Top 20, a signal that Mexico’s fandom runs deeper than casual streaming.
English-language pop dominates the middle: Justin Bieber at #3, The Weeknd and Taylor Swift tied at #4 and #5, Sabrina Carpenter at #7. What’s missing is reggaetón’s usual stronghold—only three Latin entries suggests either listener fatigue or that the latest releases haven’t caught fire yet. Even as US-Cuba tensions escalate, with military reconnaissance flights tracked near Havana, Mexico’s chart remains globally oriented, unbothered by regional political noise.
Harry Styles’s #16 album carries a 2026 date, likely an upcoming release already making noise. Tame Impala’s *Deadbeat* at #9 and Gorillaz at #17 add alternative texture to a chart otherwise built on pop and Latin urbano. Ariana Grande’s a cappella deluxe edition at #10 feels like an experiment in stripped-back intimacy.
This week, Mexico listens wide, not deep—no single genre dominates, no movement consolidates. It’s a chart of scattered attention.
English-language pop dominates the middle: Justin Bieber at #3, The Weeknd and Taylor Swift tied at #4 and #5, Sabrina Carpenter at #7. What’s missing is reggaetón’s usual stronghold—only three Latin entries suggests either listener fatigue or that the latest releases haven’t caught fire yet. Even as US-Cuba tensions escalate, with military reconnaissance flights tracked near Havana, Mexico’s chart remains globally oriented, unbothered by regional political noise.
Harry Styles’s #16 album carries a 2026 date, likely an upcoming release already making noise. Tame Impala’s *Deadbeat* at #9 and Gorillaz at #17 add alternative texture to a chart otherwise built on pop and Latin urbano. Ariana Grande’s a cappella deluxe edition at #10 feels like an experiment in stripped-back intimacy.
This week, Mexico listens wide, not deep—no single genre dominates, no movement consolidates. It’s a chart of scattered attention.