Debuting a song on the Billboard Hot 100 is a milestone in any artist’s career. As Billboard’s flagship songs chart, earning even one entry often requires a combination of widespread popularity, audience demand and the right momentum at the right time.
The Hot 100 ranks songs based on a blend of U.S. streaming activity (official audio and official video), radio airplay and sales data. Sales include purchases of physical singles and digital tracks from full-service digital retailers, while digital singles sold through direct-to-consumer (D2C) sites are excluded from chart calculations.
Since the chart launched on Aug. 4, 1958, more than 8,000 artists have earned at least one Hot 100 entry. Of those, only 22 acts have reached the elite 100-hit milestone.
Elvis Presley, whose career predated the Hot 100’s launch, became the first artist to reach 100 career entries, achieving the milestone in May 1975 with “T-R-O-U-B-L-E.” He ultimately finished with 109 total Hot 100 hits and held the all-time entries record for decades. That mark was surpassed in 2011 by the Glee cast, which expanded to a record 207 entries before being overtaken by Drake in 2020, when “Oprah’s Bank Account” earned him his 208th career entry.
Drake now leads all artists with 402 total Hot 100 entries in his career (through the chart dated May 30, 2026) and remains the only act in history to reach 400 (or even 300) songs. Only three others have crossed the 200-entry threshold: Taylor Swift (276), Future (228) and the Glee cast (207).
Three artists joined the 100-hit club in 2023. YoungBoy Never Broke Again became the youngest artist ever to achieve the feat, reaching the mark at age 23 in May. Lil Uzi Vert followed in July after releasing Pink Tape, while Travis Scott joined that August following the arrival of Utopia.
Four more artists reached the milestone in 2024. 21 Savage became the 16th act to do so after releasing American Dream. He was followed by Beyoncé after Cowboy Carter, The Weeknd through guest appearances on Future and Metro Boomin’s We Still Don’t Trust You, and Eminem after releasing The Death of Slim Shady (Coup de Grâce).
Two artists joined in 2025. Bad Bunny became the first Latin act to reach 100 Hot 100 entries after releasing Debí Tirar Más Fotos, while Morgan Wallen became the first core country artist to reach the milestone following I’m the Problem. Most recently, J. Cole entered the club in 2026 after releasing The Fall-Off.
As for who could be next, the artists approaching the century mark include Gunna (99 entries), Ariana Grande, Lil Durk and Young Thug (98 each), Post Malone (97), Kendrick Lamar (92), James Brown and Rod Wave (91 each), Metro Boomin (88) and Juice WRLD (86).
Although reaching 100 Hot 100 entries remains a rare accomplishment, the milestone has become increasingly common in the streaming era. Since streaming data was incorporated into the chart methodology in 2007, blockbuster album releases have frequently sent large numbers of tracks onto the Hot 100 simultaneously. That differs from earlier decades, when artists generally promoted one radio single at a time in a marketplace driven primarily by physical sales and airplay. The shift in consumption has made it easier for artists to accumulate large numbers of chart entries over shorter periods.
Here’s a look at every act to chart 100 or more songs on the Hot 100, as of the chart dated May 30, 2026.
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Drake

Image Credit: Astral Number of Hot 100 hits: 402. He tallied his 100th career entry in 2015 after releasing What a Time to Be Alive with Future, his 200th in 2019 after releasing Care Package, his 300th in 2023 after dropping For All the Dogs, and his record-extending 400th in 2026 after releasing ICEMAN, HABIBTI and MAID OF HONOUR. He’s the first and, to date, only artist to chart 400 (or even 300) songs. He first appeared on the Hot 100 in May 2009 with his breakthrough hit “Best I Ever Had” (No. 2 peak).
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Taylor Swift

Image Credit: Beth Garrabrant Number of Hot 100 hits: 276. She scored her 100th entry in 2020 after releasing Folklore, and she became the first woman to reach the 200-hits milestone in July 2023 after releasing Speak Now (Taylor’s Version). She first arrived on the chart in September 2006 with her breakthrough single “Tim McGraw” (No. 40 peak).
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Future

Image Credit: Gregory Stewart for GQ Number of Hot 100 hits: 228. He reached 100 entries in 2020 after dropping his album High Off Life, and tallied his 200th in August 2024 thanks to his featured appearance on Ye and Ty Dolla $ign’s “Promotion.” He became just the third solo artist to join the 200 hits club, after Drake and Taylor Swift. Future first appeared on the Hot 100 in April 2011 with a featured appearance on YC’s “Racks.”
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Glee Cast

Image Credit: Joe Viles/20th Century Fox/Courtesy Everett Collection Number of Hot 100 hits: 207. The collective notched its 100th hit in 2010 after releasing its album Glee: The Music, Season Two: Volume 4. And it reached the 200-entries mark in 2012, when its renditions of Duran Duran’s “Hungry Like The Wolf” and Gotye’s “Somebody That I Used to Know” debuted in the same week. The Glee cast charted for the first time in June 2009, when its covers of Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’” Amy Winehouse’s “Rehab” debuted at the same time.
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Lil Wayne

Image Credit: Ramona Rosales Number of Hot 100 hits: 195. He earned his 100th entry in 2012, and became just the second solo artist in history to join the Hot 100 Hits club, after Elvis Presley. He first appeared on the chart in July 1999 with a featured appearance on Juvenile’s “Back That Thang Up,” also featuring Mannie Fresh.
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Ye

Image Credit: Edward Berthelot/GC Images Number of Hot 100 hits: 177. Ye (formerly Kanye West) scored his 100th hit in 2019 after releasing his album Jesus Is King. He first debuted on the chart in November 2003 with “Through the Wire.”
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Lil Baby

Image Credit: Kenneth Cappello Number of Hot 100 hits: 159. He joined the 100-hits club in 2022 when he debuted “Right On” and “In a Minute” in the same week. He first arrived on the chart in December 2017 with “My Dawg.”
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Nicki Minaj

Image Credit: Courtesy of Universal Music Group Number of Hot 100 hits: 149. Minaj was the first woman to reach triple digits, and is the only female rapper in the club. She notched her 100th entry in 2018, and first arrived on the chart in February 2010 with a featured turn on Lil Wayne’s “Knockout.”
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Travis Scott

Image Credit: Kristina Nagel Number of Hot 100 hits: 133. He scored his 100th entry in 2023 after releasing his LP Utopia. His first entry on the chart was “3500,” featuring Future and 2 Chainz, in June 2015.
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Chris Brown

Image Credit: Jared Ryder Number of Hot 100 hits: 125. He reached the 100-hits mark in 2020 with a featured appearance on Drake’s “Not You Too.” Brown first appeared on the Hot 100 in August 2005 with “Run It!,” which spent five weeks at No. 1 later that year.
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Justin Bieber

Image Credit: Evan Paterakis Number of Hot 100 hits: 123. Bieber scored his 100th entry on the chart in 2021. He arrived on the chart in July 2009 with “One Time.”
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The Weeknd

Image Credit: Brian Ziff* Number of Hot 100 hits: 117. He became the 18th artist to reach the milestone, thanks to two guest appearances on Future and Metro Boomin’s album We Still Don’t Trust You: the title track and “All to Myself.” He first debuted on the Hot 100 in April 2012 with a featured turn on Drake’s “Crew Love.”
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Lil Uzi Vert

Image Credit: Kenneth Cappello Number of Hot 100 hits: 114. Uzi joined the club in 2023 after releasing Pink Tape. They first appeared on the chart in July 2016 with “Money Longer.”
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Bad Bunny

Image Credit: Eric Rojas Number of Hot 100 hits: 113. He became the first Latin artist in history to join the club in January 2025, following the release of his album Debí Tirar Más Fotos. He first appeared on the Hot 100 in November 2017 with a featured appearance on Becky G’s “Mayores.”
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21 Savage

Image Credit: Sue Kwon Number of Hot 100 hits: 112. He became the 16th artist to join the club in January 2024, after releasing his album American Dream. He first appeared on the chart in October 2016 with his Metro Boomin collab, “X,” featuring Future.
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Eminem

Image Credit: Travis Shinn Number of Hot 100 hits: 112. He became the 19th artist to join the club in July 2024 after releasing his album The Death of Slim Shady (Coup de Grace). He first appeared on the Hot 100 in February 1999 with his breakthrough introductory hit “My Name Is.”
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J. Cole

Image Credit: David Peters Number of Hot 100 hits: 111. He reached the 100-hits milestone in February 2026 when he debuted 21 songs on the chart from his album The Off-Season. He first arrived on the chart in June 2010 with “Who Dat.”
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YoungBoy Never Broke Again

Image Credit: Khris James Number of Hot 100 hits: 110. He tallied his 100th entry in 2023, and became the youngest act ever to join the club, at age 23. He arrived on the chart in September 2017 with “Untouchable.”
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Elvis Presley

Image Credit: Archive Photos/Getty Images Number of Hot 100 hits: 109. He became the first act in the chart’s history to reach the triple-digit milestone, in 1975. Notably, Presley’s career pre-dates the Hot 100’s inception in 1958. Two of his hits appeared on the first Hot 100 chart, on Aug. 4, 1958: “Hard Headed Woman” and “Don’t Ask Me Why.”
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Morgan Wallen

Image Credit: Spidey Smith Number of Hot 100 hits: 108. Wallen became the first core country artist to join the club in May 2025, after releasing his 37-track album I’m the Problem. He first appeared on the chart in April 2018 with “Up Down” featuring Florida Georgia Line.
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Beyoncé

Image Credit: Blair Caldwell Number of Hot 100 hits: 106. She became the 17th artist to join the club in April 2024, thanks to her album Cowboy Carter. She earned her first solo entry on the Hot 100 in October 2002 with a featured appearance on Jay-Z’s “’03 Bonnie & Clyde.” Before that, she charted 14 songs on the chart as a member of Destiny’s Child (those tracks aren’t counted in her 106 solo entries)—the group’s first entry was “No, No, No” in November 1997.
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Jay-Z

Image Credit: Shareif Ziyadat/Getty Images Number of Hot 100 hits: 105. The legendary MC hit 100 entries in 2019. He first appeared on the chart in April 1996 with “Ain’t No N—a/Dead Presidents” featuring Foxy Brown.































