“Lunch” becomes her first top five debut.
Billie Eilish has a huge week on Billboard’s charts, thanks to her new studio album, Hit Me Hard and Soft.
Along with debuting at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 (dated June 1) with the biggest weekly equivalent album units sum – 339,000 earned in the U.S. May 17-23, according to Luminate – of Eilish’s career, all 10 songs from the album debut in the top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100.
Here’s a recap of Eilish’s haul on the latest Hot 100.
Rank, Title:
No. 5, “Lunch”
No. 12, “Chihiro”
No. 13, “Birds of a Feather”
No. 17, “Wildflower”
No. 18, “Skinny”
No. 22, “L’Amour de Ma Vie”
No. 24, “The Greatest”
No. 25, “Blue”
No. 31, “The Diner”
No. 36, “Bittersuite”
“Lunch” marks Eilish’s highest Hot 100 debut and first to open in the top five, besting the No. 6 start of “My Future” in 2020.
Here’s a look at all of Eilish’s Hot 100 top 10 hits, listed by peak position.
Rank, Title, Peak Date:
No. 1, “Bad Guy,” Aug. 24, 2019
No. 2, “Therefore I Am,” Nov. 28, 2020
No. 5 (to date), “Lunch,” June 1, 2024
No. 6, “My Future,” Aug. 15, 2020
No. 8, “Everything I Wanted,” Nov. 30, 2019
No. 10, “Your Power,” May 15, 2021
Eilish’s 10 Hot 100 debuts up her career total to 43 charted songs. She first reached the ranking dated June 9, 2018, with “Lovely,” with Khalid.
Eilish adds 10 new top 40 Hot 100 hits after previously charting 10, from “Bury a Friend” (No. 14 peak, February 2019) through “What Was I Made For?” (No. 14, August 2023).
Notably, 90,000 units of the first-week sum for Hit Me Hard and Soft are in vinyl sales, as it debuts atop the Vinyl Albums chart. Eilish earns her fifth total and consecutive No. 1 on the list, following Happier Than Ever (2021), Live at Third Man Records (2020), When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? and Dont Smile at Me (both 2019). She passes Lana Del Rey for the second-most No. 1s among solo women, after Taylor Swift, who leads all acts with 13, dating to the list’s launch in 2011. Eilish has now spent 27 total weeks at No. 1 on Vinyl Albums, second only to Swift’s 52.