List of Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart achievements and milestones

The Billboard Hot Latin Songs is a record chart in the United States for Latin singles, published weekly by Billboard magazine since September 6, 1986. The chart's methodology was only based on airplay from its inception until the issue dated October 13, 2012, when Billboard updated its methodology to a multi-metric system, including sales of digital downloads and streaming activity in addition to airplay, as compiled by Nielsen SoundScan.[1]

The Billboard logo

As of the issue dated May 30, 2020, the chart has had 442 different number-one hits, while 175 artists have reached number one (as a lead or a featured act). Enrique Iglesias has the most number-one hit singles (27), Luis Miguel and Enrique Iglesias have the most top 10 songs (39 each) and Bad Bunny has the most chart entries (95). "Despacito" by Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber is the longest-reigning song at number one, with 56 non-consecutive weeks from February 2017 to September 2018, while "Propuesta Indecente" by Romeo Santos has the longest run on the chart, with 125 total weeks from August 2013 to December 2015.

"Despacito" by Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber is the chart's best-performing song of all-time as of September 2018, while Enrique Iglesias is the best-performing artist as of October 2016.

Song milestones

Most weeks at number one

"Despacito" by Luis Fonsi (top) and Daddy Yankee (bottom) featuring Justin Bieber is the song with most weeks at number one since 2018.
"Ginza" garnered J Balvin a Guinness World Record for the longest-reigning number-one by a single artist.

A total of 49 songs have spent 10 or more weeks at number one on Hot Latin Songs as of April 2020. From those singles, 29 correspond to the period from the chart's inception on September 6, 1986 to October 11, 2012, where the methodology was based on radio airplay.[1] The chart became a multi-metric ranking on the issue dated October 20, 2012, with Nielsen SoundScan measuring streaming data, digital sales and radio airplay.[1] Since then, 20 songs have spent 10 or more weeks at number one.

Songs with at least 10 weeks at number one on Hot Latin Songs
Number of
weeks
Song Artist(s) Year(s) Ref.
56 "Despacito" Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber[lower-alpha 1] 2017–2018 [3][4]
41 "Bailando" Enrique Iglesias featuring Descemer Bueno and Gente de Zona 2014–2015 [5][6]
30 "El Perdón" Nicky Jam and Enrique Iglesias 2015 [7]
25 "La Tortura" Shakira featuring Alejandro Sanz 2005 [8]
24 "Ritmo" The Black Eyed Peas and J Balvin 2020 [9]
22 "Ginza" J Balvin 2015–2016 [10][11]
20 "A Puro Dolor" Son by Four 2000 [12]
"Me Enamora" Juanes 2007–2008 [13]
"Te Quiero" Flex 2008 [14]
19 "No Me Doy Por Vencido" Luis Fonsi 2008–2009 [15]
18 "Hasta El Amanecer" Nicky Jam 2016 [16]
17 "Cuando Me Enamoro" Enrique Iglesias featuring Juan Luis Guerra 2010 [17]
"Vivir Mi Vida" Marc Anthony 2013–2014 [18]
16 "Qué Te Pasa" Yuri 1988 [19]
"Mía" Bad Bunny featuring Drake 2018–2019 [20]
15 "Rompe" Daddy Yankee 2005–2006 [21]
"Danza Kuduro" Don Omar featuring Lucenzo 2010–2011 [22]
"Limbo" Daddy Yankee 2013 [23]
14 "De Mí Enamórate" Daniela Romo 1986–1987 [24]
"Ay Amor" Ana Gabriel 1988 [25]
"Algo Me Gusta de Ti" Wisin & Yandel featuring Chris Brown and T-Pain 2012–2013 [26]
"Darte Un Beso" Prince Royce 2013–2014 [27]
"Duele El Corazón" Enrique Iglesias featuring Wisin 2016 [28]
"Te Boté" Casper Mágico, Nío García, Darell, Nicky Jam, Ozuna, and Bad Bunny 2018 [29]
"Con Calma" Daddy Yankee and Katy Perry featuring Snow 2019 [30]
13 "Lo Mejor de Tu Vida" Julio Iglesias 1987 [31]
"Quítame Ese Hombre" Pilar Montenegro 2002 [32]
"Odio" Romeo Santos featuring Drake 2014 [33]
"Taki Taki" DJ Snake featuring Selena Gomez, Ozuna, and Cardi B 2018–2019 [34]
12 "Enamorado Por Primera Vez" Enrique Iglesias 1997 [35]
"Nada Valgo Sin Tu Amor" Juanes 2004 [36]
"Mi Gente" J Balvin and Willy William featuring Beyoncé 2017–2018 [37]
"China" Anuel AA, Daddy Yankee, and Karol G featuring Ozuna and J Balvin 2019 [38]
11 "Amor" Cristian Castro 1996 [39]
"Tal Vez" Ricky Martin 2003 [40]
"Dímelo" Enrique Iglesias 2007 [41]
"Chantaje" Shakira featuring Maluma 2016–2017 [42]
10 "Como Tu Mujer" Rocío Durcal 1988–1989 [43]
"Como Tú" José José 1989 [44]
"Es Demasiado Tarde" Ana Gabriel 1990–1991 [45]
"Todo, Todo, Todo" Daniela Romo 1991 [46]
"Cosas del Amor" Vikki Carr and Ana Gabriel 1991 [47]
"Evidencias" Ana Gabriel 1992 [48]
"Tú Solo Tú" Selena 1995 [49]
"Qué Pena Me Das" Marco Antonio Solís 1996 [50]
"Solo En Ti" Enrique Iglesias 1997 [51]
"Promise" Romeo Santos featuring Usher 2011 [52]
"Ai Se Eu Te Pego" Michel Teló 2012 [53]
"Dakiti" Bad Bunny and Jhay Cortez 2020–2021 [54]

Most total weeks

"Propuesta Indecente" by Romeo Santos is the song with most total weeks on the chart since 2014.

A total of 13 songs have had a chart run of 53 or more weeks on Hot Latin Songs as of January 2020. As of December 7, 2013, Billboard's recurrent rule removes any song from the chart if it has fallen below number 25 after spending 20 weeks, below number 10 after 26 weeks, or below number five after 52 weeks.[55][56] The first measure is applied from October 20, 2012 onwards.[57] Previously, descending songs were removed if ranking below number 20 after 20 weeks,[58][59] a rule first applied on December 3, 2005.[60][61]

Songs with at least 53 total weeks on Hot Latin Songs[62]
Number of
weeks
Song Artist(s) Year(s) Ref.
125 "Propuesta Indecente" Romeo Santos 2013–2015 [55][63]
110 "Despacito" Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber 2017–2019 [3]
62 "Incondicional" Prince Royce 2012–2013 [64][65]
61 "A Puro Dolor" Son by Four 2000–2001 [12]
60 "Mi Corazoncito" Aventura 2007–2008 [66]
59 "Amor Confuso" Gerardo Ortíz 2012–2013 [67]
58 "El Perdón" Nicky Jam and Enrique Iglesias 2015–2016 [7]
57 "Tu Cárcel" Los Bukis 1987–1988 [68]
"Hasta El Amanecer" Nicky Jam 2016–2017 [16]
56 "Corazón Sin Cara" Prince Royce 2010–2011 [69]
"Mi Gente" J Balvin and Willy William featuring Beyoncé 2017–2018 [37]
54 "Vivir Mi Vida" Marc Anthony 2013–2014 [18]
53 "Bailando" Enrique Iglesias featuring Descemer Bueno and Gente de Zona 2014–2015 [5]

Number-one debuts

Bad Bunny (pictured) and Maná have the most number-one debuts, with three each. Bad Bunny has also the most total chart entries since 2019.
Year Issue date Song Artist(s) Ref.
1995 July 15 "El Palo" Juan Gabriel [70]
1997 February 1 "Enamorado Por Primera Vez" Enrique Iglesias [71]
May 3 "Solo En Ti" Enrique Iglesias [72]
October 11 "La Venia Bendita" Marco Antonio Solís [73]
1998 February 7 "Por Qué Te Conocí" Los Temerarios [74]
2003 April 12 "Tal Vez" Ricky Martin [75]
2006 August 5 "Labios Compartidos" Maná [76]
2007 September 29 "Me Enamora" Juanes [77]
2011 March 21 "Lluvia al Corazón" Maná [78]
May 28 "You" Romeo Santos [79]
2012 January 14 "Hotel Nacional" Gloria Estefan [80]
October 4 "Volví a Nacer" Carlos Vives [81]
2015 February 28 "Mi Verdad" Maná featuring Shakira [82]
2016 November 19 "Chantaje" Shakira featuring Maluma [83]
2018 September 15 "Bebé" 6ix9ine featuring Anuel AA [84]
October 13 "Taki Taki" DJ Snake featuring Selena Gomez, Ozuna, and Cardi B [85]
2019 November 23 "Tusa" Karol G and Nicki Minaj [86]
2020 March 13 "Si Veo A Tu Mamá" Bad Bunny [87]
August 8 "Un Día" J Balvin, Dua Lipa, Bad Bunny, and Tainy [88]
November 14 "Dakiti" Bad Bunny and Jhay Cortez [89]

Artist achievements

Most number-one singles

Enrique Iglesias achieved 27 number-one songs from 1995 to 2016 and remained at the top position for 189 weeks.
Number of
singles
Artist Longest-reigning number-one Span Ref.
27 Enrique Iglesias "Bailando" (2014) – 41 weeks[lower-alpha 2] 1995–2016 [90][91]
16 Luis Miguel "Tengo Todo Excepto a Ti" (1990) – 8 weeks[lower-alpha 3] 1987–2003 [92]
15 Gloria Estefan "Mi Tierra" (1993) and "En El Jardín" (1997) – 6 weeks[lower-alpha 4] 1989–2012 [93]
11 Shakira "La Tortura" (2005) – 25 weeks[lower-alpha 5] 1998–2017 [94]
Ricky Martin "Tal Vez" (2003) – 11 weeks[lower-alpha 6] 1998–2011 [95]
Marco Antonio Solís "Qué Pena Me Das" (1996) – 10 weeks[lower-alpha 7] 1995–2014 [96]
10 Maná "Labios Compartidos" (2006) and "Lluvia al Corazón" (2011) – 8 weeks[lower-alpha 8] 2003–2015 [97]
Wisin & Yandel "Algo Me Gusta de Ti" (2012) – 14 weeks[lower-alpha 9] 2006–2013 [98]
9 Chayanne "Y Tú Te Vas" (2002) – 7 weeks[lower-alpha 10] 1989–2007 [99]
J Balvin "Ritmo" (2020) – 24 weeks[lower-alpha 11] 2015–2020 [100]

Most cumulative weeks at number one

Number of
weeks
Artist Ref.
189 Enrique Iglesias [101]
117 Daddy Yankee [102]
82 Luis Fonsi [103]
80 J Balvin [100]
67 Nicky Jam [104]
64 Luis Miguel [92]
64 Shakira [94]
56 Ana Gabriel[lower-alpha 12] [107]
53 Juanes [108]
45 Ozuna [109]

Most top 10 singles

Luis Miguel holds the record for the most top 10 songs since at least 15 years.
Artists with at least 25 top 10 songs on Hot Latin Songs
Number of
singles
Artist Song with most weeks in the top 10 Span Ref.
39 Luis Miguel "Ahora Te Puedes Marchar" (1987) – 24 weeks 1987–2005 [92][110]
Enrique Iglesias "El Perdón" (2015) – 56 weeks 1995–2020 [90][111]
38 Bad Bunny "Te Boté" (2018) and "Mía" (2018) – 52 weeks 2017–2020 [112]
35 Daddy Yankee "Despacito" (2017) – 110 weeks 2005–2020 [102][113]
30 Shakira "Chantaje" (2016) – 47 weeks 1998–2020 [94][114]
29 Cristian Castro "Por Amarte Así" (2000) – 32 weeks 1992–2009 [115]
Chayanne "Y Tú Te Vas" (2002) – 33 weeks 1987–2014 [99]
J Balvin "Mi Gente" (2017) – 56 weeks 2014–2020 [100]
27 Ricky Martin "Tu Recuerdo" (2006) – 27 weeks 1992–2017 [95]
Marco Antonio Solís "El Perdedor" (2014) – 35 weeks 1994–2014 [96]
Marc Anthony "Vivir Mi Vida" (2013) – 54 weeks 1994–2020 [116]

Most chart entries

Artists with at least 50 chart entries on Hot Latin Songs
Number of
singles
Artist Longest-charting song Span Ref.
111 Bad Bunny "Te Boté" (2018) and "Mía" (2018) – 52 weeks 2016–2020 [112]
81 Ozuna "El Farsante" (2017) and "Te Boté" (2018) – 52 weeks 2016–2020 [109]
80 Daddy Yankee "Despacito" (2017) – 110 weeks 2004–2020 [102]
72 J Balvin "Mi Gente" (2017) – 56 weeks 2013–2020 [100]
66 Los Tigres del Norte "La Sorpresa" (2005) – 26 weeks 1987–2015 [117]
65 Anuel AA "Ella Quiere Beber" (2018) – 46 weeks 2016–2020 [118]
61 Vicente Fernández "Me Voy A Quitar De En Medio" (1999) – 52 weeks 1987–2013 [119]
57 Luis Miguel "Ahora Te Puedes Marchar" (1987) – 34 weeks 1987–2010 [92]
55 Marc Anthony "Vivir Mi Vida" (2013) – 54 weeks 1993–2020 [116]
54 Intocable "Sueña" (2002) – 30 weeks 1995–2018 [120]
51 Marco Antonio Solís[lower-alpha 13] "Más Que Tu Amigo" (2004) – 47 weeks 1987–2018 [123]

Additional records

  • Enrique Iglesias is the artist with the most songs that have topped the chart for at least 10 weeks each, with seven.[101]
  • Ricky Martin is the only artist to appear on the chart in five different decades, including his work in Menudo from 1986 to 1989, which is counted separately.[124] As a solo artist, Ricky Martin charted in four decades, like Luis Miguel, Chayanne and Enrique Iglesias.[90][92][99][125]
  • Bad Bunny holds the record for the most simultaneous top 10, top 20 and top 25 songs on the issue dated March 14, 2020, with eight, 18 and 20 tracks, respectively.[126]
  • Ozuna and Bad Bunny share the record for the most concurrent charting songs in one week, with 20 each, on the issues dated September 8, 2018 and March 14, 2020, respectively.[126][127]

Year-end chart

Artists with most years in the top 10

Number
of years
Artist Years Total
songs
12 Enrique Iglesias 1996, 1997, 1999, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 16
8 Daddy Yankee 2005, 2006, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 11
7 Ana Gabriel 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1998 9
Luis Miguel 1989, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997 8
Marco Antonio Solís 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2004, 2014 7
Shakira 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2016, 2017 7
J Balvin 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020 9
6 Los Bukis 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1995 6
Juan Gabriel 1987, 1988, 1994, 1997, 1998, 2001 7
Ricky Martin 1998, 1999, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2014 6
Marc Anthony 1999, 2000, 2004, 2013, 2014, 2015 6
La Arrolladora Banda El Limón 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013 6
Romeo Santos 2011, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019 9

Most weeks at number one by year

Year Artist (weeks) Song (weeks) Ref.
1986 Juan Gabriel and José José (4) "Yo No Sé Qué Me Pasó" by Juan Gabriel (4) [128]
1987 Julio Iglesias (15) "Lo Mejor de Tu Vida" by Julio Iglesias (13) [129]
1988 Yuri (16) "Qué Te Pasa" by Yuri (16) [130]
1989 José José and Luis Miguel (10) "Como Tú" by José José (10) [131]
1990 Ana Gabriel (11) "Tengo Todo Excepto A Ti" by Luis Miguel (8) [132]
1991 Ana Gabriel (16) "Todo, Todo, Todo" by Daniela Romo and "Cosas del Amor" by Vikki Carr and Ana Gabriel (10) [133]
1992 Luis Miguel (12) "Evidencias" by Ana Gabriel (10) [134]
1993 Ricardo Montaner (11) "Me Estoy Enamorando" by La Mafia (9) [135]
1994 Selena (22) "Amor Prohibido" by Selena (9) [136]
1995 Selena (21) "Tú Solo Tú" by Selena (10) [137]
1996 Enrique Iglesias (19) "Amor" by Cristian Castro (11) [138]
1997 Enrique Iglesias (27) "Enamorado Por Primera Vez" by Enrique Iglesias (12) [139]
1998 Alejandro Fernández (19) "No Sé Olvidar" by Alejandro Fernández (8) [140]
1999 Ricky Martin and Marc Anthony (12) "Livin' La Vida Loca" by Ricky Martin (9) [141]
2000 Son by Four (21) "A Puro Dolor" by Son by Four (20) [142]
2001 Juan Gabriel and Cristian Castro (9) "Abrázame Muy Fuerte" by Juan Gabriel and "Azul" by Cristian Castro (9) [143]
2002 Pilar Montenegro (13) "Quítame Ese Hombre" by Pilar Montenegro (13) [144]
2003 Ricky Martin (12) "Tal Vez" by Ricky Martin (11) [145]
2004 Juanes (12) "Nada Valgo Sin Tu Amor" by Juanes (12) [146]
2005 Shakira and Alejandro Sanz (25) "La Tortura" by Shakira featuring Alejandro Sanz (25) [147]
2006 Daddy Yankee (12) "Rompe" by Daddy Yankee (12) [148]
2007 Juanes (14) "Me Enamora" by Juanes (14) [149]
2008 Flex (20) "Te Quiero" by Flex (20) [150]
2009 Luis Fonsi and Banda El Recodo (7) "Te Presumo" by Banda El Recodo (6) [151]
2010 Juan Luis Guerra (18) "Cuando Me Enamoro" by Enrique Iglesias featuring Juan Luis Guerra (17) [152]
2011 Romeo Santos (15) "Danza Kuduro" by Don Omar featuring Lucenzo, "Lluvia al Corazón" by Maná, and "Promise" by Romeo Santos featuring Usher (8) [153]
2012 Wisin & Yandel (13) "Algo Me Gusta De Ti" by Wisin & Yandel featuring Chris Brown and T-Pain (11) [154]
2013 Marc Anthony (17) "Vivir Mi Vida" by Marc Anthony (16) [155]
2014 Enrique Iglesias (34) "Bailando" by Enrique Iglesias featuring Descemer Bueno and Gente de Zona (33) [156]
2015 Enrique Iglesias (38) "El Perdón" by Nicky Jam and Enrique Iglesias (30) [157]
2016 Nicky Jam (18) "Hasta El Amanecer" by Nicky Jam (18) [158]
2017 Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee (35) "Despacito" by Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber (35)[lower-alpha 1] [159]
2018 Ozuna (26) "Despacito" by Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber (21) [160]
2019 Daddy Yankee (26) "Con Calma" by Daddy Yankee and Katy Perry featuring Snow (14) [161]
2020 J Balvin (29) "Ritmo" by The Black Eyed Peas and J Balvin (24)

Notes

  1. The original version of "Despacito" by Luis Fonsi featuring Daddy Yankee remained at number one for 12 weeks before the remix version featuring Justin Bieber was combined to the chart entry on May 6, 2017.[2]
  2. Enrique Iglesias' number-one songs ordered by total weeks at peak position (189):
    • 41 – "Bailando" (2014)
    • 30 – "El Perdón" (2015)
    • 17 – "Cuando Me Enamoro" (2010)
    • 14 – "Duele El Corazón" (2016)
    • 12 – "Enamorado Por Primera Vez" (1997)
    • 11 – "Dímelo" (2007)
    • 10 – "Solo En Ti" (1997)
    • 8 – "Si Tú Te Vas" (1995), "Por Amarte" (1996)
    • 5 – "Trapecista" (1996)
    • 4 – "Miente" (1997), "Esperanza" (1998), "Rhythm Divine" (1999)
    • 3 – "Experiencia Religiosa" (1996), "Dónde Están Corazón" (2008), "Loco" (2013)
    • 2 – "Lloro Por Ti" (2008)
    • 1 – "No Llores Por Mí" (1996), "Nunca Te Olvidaré" (1999), "Bailamos" (1999), "Héroe" (2001), "Mentiroso" (2002), "Quizás" (2003), "Para Qué La Vida" (2003), "Gracias A Ti" (2009), "No Me Digas Que No" (2011), "El Perdedor" (2014)
  3. Luis Miguel's number-one songs ordered by total weeks at peak position (64):
    • 8 – "Tengo Todo Excepto A Ti" (1990)
    • 7 – "La Incondicional" (1989), "No Sé Tú" (1992), "Si Nos Dejan" (1995)
    • 5 – "Inolvidable" (1992), "El Día Que Me Quieras" (1994)
    • 4 – "Por Debajo de la Mesa" (1997)
    • 3 – "Ahora Te Puedes Marchar" (1987), "Fría Como El Viento" (1989), "Ayer" (1993), "Hasta Que Me Olvides" (1993), "La Media Vuelta" (1994)
    • 2 – "Cómo Duele" (2002), "Te Necesito" (2003)
    • 1 – "Entrégate" (1990), "O Tú O Ninguna" (1999)
  4. Gloria Estefan's number-one songs ordered by total weeks at peak position (39):
    • 6 – "Mi Tierra" (1993), "En El Jardín" (1997)
    • 5 – "Si Voy A Perderte" (1989)
    • 4 – "Con Los Años Que Nos Quedan" (1993), "Hoy" (2003)
    • 2 – "Mi Buen Amor" (1994), "Abriendo Puertas" (1995), "Cómo Me Duele Perderte" (2000), "No Llores" (2007)
    • 1 – "Más Allá" (1996), "No Pretendo" (1997), "Oye" (1998), "No Me Dejes De Querer" (2000), "Tu Fotografía" (2004), "Hotel Nacional" (2012)
  5. Shakira's number-one songs ordered by total weeks at peak position (64):
    • 25 – "La Tortura" (2005)
    • 11 – "Chantaje" (2016)
    • 8 – "Hips Don't Lie" (2006)
    • 7 – "Suerte" (2001)
    • 5 – "Loba" (2009)
    • 3 – "Ciega Sordomuda" (1998)
    • 1 – "Tú" (1999), "Que Me Quedes Tú" (2003), "Te Lo Agradezco Pero No" (2007), "Loca" (2010), "Mi Verdad" (2015)
  6. Ricky Martin's number-one songs ordered by total weeks at peak position (38):
    • 11 – "Tal Vez" (2003)
    • 9 – "Livin' La Vida Loca" (1999)
    • 4 – "Solo Quiero Amarte" (2001)
    • 3 – "Bella" (1999), "Tu Recuerdo" (2006)
    • 2 – "Vuelve" (1998), "Lo Mejor De Mi Vida Eres Tú" (2011)
    • 1 – "Perdido Sin Ti" (1998), "She Bangs" (2000), "Jaleo" (2003), "Y Todo Queda En Nada" (2004)
  7. Marco Antonio Solís' number-one songs ordered by total weeks at peak position (38):
    • 10 – "Qué Pena Me Das" (1996)
    • 8 – "Recuerdos, Tristeza y Soledad" (1996)
    • 6 – "Una Mujer Como Tú" (1995)
    • 3 – "Así Como Te Conocí" (1997), "Si Te Pudiera Mentir" (1999), "Ojalá" (2007)
    • 1 – "La Venia Bendita" (1997), "O Me Voy O Te Vas" (2001), "Tu Amor o Tu Desprecio" (2003), "Más Que Tu Amigo" (2004), "El Perdedor" (2014)
  8. Maná's number-one songs ordered by total weeks at peak position (31):
    • 8 – "Labios Compartidos" (2006), "Lluvia Al Corazón" (2011)
    • 4 – "Bendita Tu Luz" (2006), "El Verdadero Amor Perdona" (2011)
    • 2 – "Si No Te Hubieras Ido" (2008)
    • 1 – "Mariposa Traicionera" (2003), "Manda Una Señal" (2007), "Amor Clandestino" (2011), "Hasta Que Te Conocí" (2012), "Mi Verdad" (2015)
  9. Wisin & Yandel's number-one songs ordered by total weeks at peak position (25):
    • 14 – "Algo Me Gusta De Ti" (2012)
    • 2 – "Llamé Pa' Verte" (2006), "Follow the Leader" (2012)
    • 1 – "Pam Pam" (2006), "Sexy Movimiento" (2008), "Me Estás Tentando" (2009), "Abusadora" (2009), "Gracias a Ti" (2009), "No Me Digas Que No" (2011), "Tu Olor" (2011)
  10. Chayanne's number-one songs ordered by total weeks at peak position (33):
    • 7 – "Y Tú Te Vas" (2002)
    • 5 – "Completamente Enamorados" (1990), "Dejaría Todo" (1998), "Yo Te Amo" (2000)
    • 4 – "Fuiste Un Trozo de Hielo en la Escarcha" (1989)
    • 3 – "Cuidarte El Alma" (2004)
    • 2 – "El Centro De Mi Corazón" (1992)
    • 1 – "Un Siglo Sin Ti" (2003), "Si Nos Quedara Poco Tiempo" (2007)
  11. J Balvin's number-one songs ordered by total weeks at peak position (80):
    • 24 – "Ritmo" (2020)
    • 22 – "Ginza" (2015)
    • 12 – "Mi Gente" (2017), "China" (2019)
    • 5 – "Un Día" (2020)
    • 2 – "X" (2018)
    • 1 – "Ay Vamos" (2015), "Bobo" (2016), "La Canción" (2019)
  12. Billboard does not count Ana Gabriel's 1991 collaboration with Vikki Carr, "Cosas del Amor", mistakenly crediting them as a duo. Ana Gabriel has seven number-ones, 21 top 10 songs, and 38 chart entries.[105][106]
  13. Billboard does not count Marco Antonio Solís' 1987 collaboration with Beatriz Adriana, "Entre Tú y Yo", mistakenly crediting them as a duo. Solís has 11 number-ones, 27 top 10 songs, and 51 chart entries.[121][122]

References

  1. "Billboard Shakes Up Genre Charts With New Methodology". Billboard. The Hollywood Reporter. October 11, 2012. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  2. "Justin Bieber sorprende a sus fanáticos cantando en español 'Despacito' junto a Luis Fonsi" (in Spanish). CNN en Español. April 17, 2017. Retrieved March 8, 2018.
  3. "Luis Fonsi Despacito Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  4. "Most weeks at No.1 on Billboard's Hot Latin Songs chart". Guinness World Records. September 1, 2018. Retrieved August 13, 2020.
  5. "Enrique Iglesias Bailando Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  6. Fabian, Renée (October 4, 2017). "Enrique Iglesias To J Balvin: 15 Longest-Running Hot Latin Songs". The Recording Academy. Retrieved March 28, 2018.
  7. "Nicky Jam El Perdon Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  8. "Shakira La Tortura Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  9. "The Black Eyed Peas Ritmo (Bad Boys For Life) Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 31, 2020.
  10. "J Balvin Ginza Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  11. Rocher, Sofia (February 9, 2017). "International urban music star J Balvin breaks record with his smash hit 'Ginza'". Guinness World Records. Retrieved August 13, 2020.
  12. "Son by Four A Puro Dolor Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  13. "Juanes Me Enamora Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  14. "Flex Te Quiero Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  15. "Luis Fonsi No Me Doy Por Vencido Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  16. "Nicky Jam Hasta El Amanecer Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  17. "Enrique Iglesias Cuando Me Enamoro Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  18. "Marc Anthony Vivir Mi Vida Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  19. "Yuri Que Te Pasa Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  20. "Bad Bunny Mia Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 14, 2019.
  21. "Daddy Yankee Rompe Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  22. "Don Omar Danza Kuduro Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  23. "Daddy Yankee Limbo Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
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