List of Billboard Hot Country Songs chart achievements

This article highlights significant milestones and achievements based upon Billboard magazine's Hot Country Songs (and its titled predecessors) chart, and accomplishments on the Hot Country Albums chart.

This list spans from the issue dated January 8, 1944 to the present. Billboard magazine began tracking the popularity of country music songs at that time, and it is widely considered to be the standard music popularity chart in the United States.

From 1944-1948, Billboard used just one chart to track songs' popularity - "Most Played Juke Box Folk Records." There was no standard chart length; a given week had anywhere from two to eight positions. A "Best Sellers" chart (first titled "Best Seling Retail Folk Records") was added with the May 15, 1948 issue, while a "Jockeys" (first known as "Country & Western Records Most Played by Folk Disk Jockeys") first appeared on December 10, 1949. From 1949-1957, there were three charts that measured the popularity of country music songs; the Jukebox chart was dropped after the June 17, 1957 chart, while the final Best Sellers and Jockeys charts ended with the October 13, 1958 issue.

Starting October 20, 1958, there was one all-encompassing chart, combining both retail sales and radio airplay. First known as "Hot C&W Sides," the chart name changed to "Hot Country Singles" on November 3, 1962; "Hot Country Singles & Tracks" on January 20, 1990; and "Hot Country Songs" on April 30, 2005. The chart length varied through the years: 30 (1958-1964), 50 (1964-1966), 75 (1966-1973), 100 (1973-1990), 75 (1990-2000) and 60 (since January 6, 2001).

Most Top 40 hits

 * 145 — George Jones
 * 128 — Eddy Arnold
 * 105 — Johnny Cash
 * 93 — Merle Haggard
 * 92 — Waylon Jennings

Most Top 10 singles

 * 92 — Eddy Arnold
 * 80 — George Strait
 * 78 — George Jones
 * 75 — Conway Twitty
 * 71 — Merle Haggard

Most No. 1 hits

 * 44 — George Strait (last #1 on April 18, 2009)
 * 40 — Conway Twitty (last #1 on September 6, 1986)
 * 38 — Merle Haggard (last #1 on February 20, 1988)
 * 35 — Ronnie Milsap (last #1 on December 23, 1989)
 * 32 — Alabama (last #1 on November 27, 1993)
 * 29 — Charley Pride (last #1 on September 17, 1983)
 * 28 — Eddy Arnold (last #1 on October 19, 1968)
 * 25 — Alan Jackson (last #1 on January 31, 2009)
 * 25 — Dolly Parton (last #1 on March 4, 2006)
 * 23 — Sonny James (last #1 on May 11, 1974)

Most No. 1 hits in a calendar year

 * 5 — tie between two artists:
 * Eddy Arnold, 1948 with "Anytime," "Boquet of Roses," "Texarkana Baby," "Just a Little Lovin' (Will Go a Long, Long Way)" and "A Heart Full of Love (For a Handful of Kisses)."
 * Charlie Rich, 1974 with "There Won't Be Anymore," "A Very Special Love Song," "I Don't See Me in Your Eyes Anymore," "I Love My Friend" and "She Called Me Baby."

Note: Eddy Arnold's feat does not count "I'll Hold You in My Heart (Til I Can Hold You In My Arms)," which began its 21-week run at No. 1 in November 1947 and remained there well into 1948.

Most consecutive No. 1 hits

 * Note: Billboard and statistician Joel Whitburn disregard all non-No. 1 duets and Christmas releases in determining No. 1 streaks. If Christmas songs and duets were to be included in No. 1 streaks, however, Sonny James would continue to hold the standard with 16; Alabama's streak would be eight and 13 (with the 1982 Christmas song "Christmas in Dixie" splitting the pair of streaks) and Conley's streak split into nine and seven (broken up by the 1986 duet "Too Many Times" with Anita Pointer).

Most weeks at No. 1

 * 145 — Eddy Arnold
 * 111 — Webb Pierce
 * 84 — George Strait
 * 82 — Buck Owens
 * 82 — Hank Williams with His Drifting Cowboys

Self-replacement at No. 1
Eddy Arnold holds the record, scoring five straight No. 1 songs in 1947-1948 without being replaced by another artist. The songs were:
 * "I'll Hold You in My Heart (Till I Can Hold You In My Arms)" (21 weeks)
 * "Anytime" (9 weeks)
 * "Boquet of Roses" (18 weeks Jukebox, 19 weeks Best Seller)
 * "Texarkana Baby" (3 weeks Jukebox, 1 week Best Seller)
 * "Just A Little Lovin' (Will Go a Long, Long Way)" (8 weeks Jukebox, 4 weeks Best Seller).

Artists who have appeared in the Top 40 in at least five different decades

 * 'Note: Ernest Tubb was not credited on the Billboard chart in 1983 when he appeared as one of two guest vocalists on Hank Williams Jr.'s 1983 Top 10 hit, "Leave Them Boys Alone." However, the song appears as the last chart entry under Tubb's listing (and thus, is'' given credit) in Joel Whitburn's book "The Billboard Book of Top 40 Country Hits" 2nd ed. (ISBN 0832082911).

Artists who have hit No. 1 posthumously

 * Hank WilliamsA (d. January 1, 1953) — with His Drifting Cowboys, scored four of his 11 career No. 1 songs after his death: "I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive," "Kaw-Liga," "Your Cheatin' Heart" and "Take These Chains From My Heart," all 1953; "Kaw-Liga" was the No. 1 song of 1953
 * Betty Jack Davis (d. August 2, 1953) — As a member of The Davis Sisters, went to No. 1 with "I Forgot More Than You'll Ever Know" in late 1953.
 * Johnny Horton (d. November 5, 1960) — "North to Alaska" (1961).
 * Hawkshaw Hawkins (d. March 5, 1963) — "Lonesome 7-7203" (1963).
 * Jim ReevesA (d. July 31, 1964) — Had six No. 1 songs after his death: "I Guess I'm Crazy" (1964); "This Is It" and "Is It Really Over" (1965); "Distant Drums" and "Blue Side of Lonesome" (1966); and "I Won't Come In While He's Here" (1967).
 * Elvis PresleyA, B (d. August 16, 1977) — "Guitar Man" (1981).
 * Keith WhitleyA (d. May 9, 1989) — "I Wonder Do You Think of Me" (1989) and "It Ain't Nothin'" (1990).
 * ANote: In addition to their No. 1 hits, each of the artists have scored a number of Top 10 hits after their deaths. 
 * BPresley's "Way Down" charted at No. 1 the week of his death.

Youngest Male

 * Artist with a top 40 hit — Billy Gilman, who was 12 years, 3 months in September 2000 when he reached No. 20 with "One Voice."
 * Artist with a No. 1 hit — Phil Everly, who was 18 years, 6 months in July 1957 when, as a member of the Everly Brothers, reached the top with "Bye Bye Love."

Oldest male

 * Artist with a top 40 hit — George Burns, who was 84 years old in March 1980 when he peaked in the Top 15 with "I Wish I Was Eighteen Again."
 * Artist with a No. 1 hit — Willie Nelson, who was 70 years, 1 month and 2 weeks when he hit No. 1 with "Beer for My Horses", a duet with 41-year-old Toby Keith on June 14, 2003.

Youngest Female

 * Artist with a top 40 hit — Ashley Gearing, who was 12 years, one month, and one week old, when she hit with "Can You Hear Me When I Talk to You?", which peaked at #37 in 2003.
 * Artist with a No. 1 hit — Marie Osmond, who was 14 years, 27 days when she hit with "Paper Roses" on November 10, 1973.

Oldest Female

 * Artist with a No. 1 hit — Dolly Parton, who was 60 years, one month and 14 days when she hit with "When I Get Where I'm Going". a duet with then-33-year-old Brad Paisley, on March 4, 2006. She also holds the distinction of being the oldest female artist with a top 40 hit.

Overall

 * * In years where there were multiple charts, the most weeks spent on a particular chart is considered.
 * A Hank Snow's "I'm Movin' On" breaks the tie among the three 21-week chart toppers (most weeks in the Top 10, at 44) and has been given Billboard's No. 1 honor; "I'll Hold You In My Heart" spent 41 weeks in the Top 10, "In the Jailhouse Now" 34 weeks.

By decade*

 * 1940s-"I'll Hold You In My Heart" (21 weeks)
 * 1950s - "I'm Movin' On" by Hank Snow and His Rainbow Ranch Boys (1950); and "In the Jailhouse Now" by Webb Pierce (1955), (21 weeks each)
 * 1960s - "Walk On By" by Leroy Van Dyke (1961) (19 weeks)
 * 1970s - "My Hang-Up Is You" by Freddie Hart (1972); "Convoy" by C.W. McCall (1976); and "Luckenbach, Texas (Back to the Basics of Love)" by Waylon Jennings (1977) (6 weeks each)
 * 1980s - "Coward of the County" by Kenny Rogers (1980); "My Heart" by Ronnie Milsap (1980); "Lookin' for Love" by Johnny Lee (1980); and "Forever and Ever, Amen" by Randy Travis (1987) (3 weeks each)
 * 1990s - "Amazed" by Lonestar (1999) (8 weeks)
 * 2000s - "It's Five O'Clock Somewhere" by Alan Jackson and Jimmy Buffett (2003) (8 weeks)
 * * In years where there were multiple charts, the most weeks spent on a particular chart is considered.

Three times

 * "She (He) Thinks I Still Care" - George Jones (1962), Anne Murray (1974) and Elvis Presley (1977, flip side to "Moody Blue")

Two times

 * "Pistol Packin' Mama" - Bing Crosby and The Andrews Sisters, and Al Dexter (both 1944)
 * "Smoke on the Water" - Red Foley (1944) and Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys (1945)
 * "Shame on You" - Spade Cooley, and Lawrence Welk Orchestra with Red Foley (both 1945)
 * "Slippin' Around" - Ernest Tubb, and Margaret Whiting and Jimmy Wakely (both 1949)
 * "Don't Let the Stars Get In Your Eyes" - Slim Willet and Skeets McDonald (both 1952)
 * "I Don't Care" - Webb Pierce (1955) and Ricky Skaggs (1982)
 * "Why Baby Why" - Webb Pierce and Red Sovine (1956), and Charley Pride (1983)
 * "Heartbreak Hotel" - Elvis Presley (1956), and Willie Nelson and Leon Russell (1979)
 * "City Lights" - Ray Price (1958) and Mickey Gilley (1975)
 * "She's Got You" - Patsy Cline (1962) and Loretta Lynn (1977)
 * "Together Again" - Buck Owens (1964) and Emmylou Harris (1976)
 * "It's Just a Matter of Time" - Sonny James (1970) and Randy Travis (1989)
 * "(Lost Her/His Love On Our) Last Date" - Conway Twitty (1972) and Emmylou Harris (1983)
 * "That's the Way Love Goes" - Johnny Rodriguez (1974) and Merle Haggard (1984)
 * "It Must Be Love" - Don Williams (1979) and Alan Jackson (2000)

In addition

 * Dolly Parton was the only artist to have a No. 1 song with two different recorded versions of the same song. Her original recording of "I Will Always Love You" went to No. 1 in 1974. A re-recording of the song, for the movie The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, reached No. 1 in 1982. A second re-recording with Vince Gill also charted at #15 in 1995.

Songs that reached No. 1 on both the country and pop charts

 * This section is a listing of all songs which reached No. 1 on the Billboard country - or prior to 1958, at least one of the component charts (best sellers, jukebox and/or jockey) - and Billboard Hot 100 (or, before 1958, one of the component charts (best sellers, jukebox, jockey and/or Top 100)).

* Note: For pre-1958 songs, the most weeks spent atop any one of the component charts is considered

Most and fewest No. 1s in a given year

 * Most: (tie) 1985 and 1986, when 51 different No. 1 songs peaked in each year.*
 * Least: 1960, when just four different songs (five, if "El Paso" by Marty Robbins is counted) topped the chart. Each of the new No. 1 songs that year spent 10 or more weeks atop the chart.
 * * Note: In 1985 and 1986, the No. 1 hit for the last week of December of each year spent two weeks in that position, in part due to the second week being a "frozen" week. This was at a time when Billboard "froze" the charts during the final week of the year due to its publication of the year-end issue. In addition, one song in 1985 — Ronnie Milsap's "Lost in the Fifties Tonight (In the Still of the Night)" — spent two weeks at No. 1 that October.

Early Billboard Country Charts (1944-1958)

 * "Guitar Polka" - Al Dexter -- (1946) -- debuted at #1
 * "Kaw Liga" - Hank Williams with His Drifting Cowboys -- (1953) -- debuted at #1

1973 to inception of BDS in 1990

 * 15 to 1 — "Convoy" -- C.W. McCall (December 20, 1975)

BDS-era (1990-present)

 * 9 to 1 - "Keep It Between the Lines" -- Ricky Van Shelton (October 12, 1991)

Prior to inception of BDS in 1990

 * 1 to 43 (tie)
 * "Feels So Right" — Alabama (August 1, 1981)
 * "Tight Fittin' Jeans" — Conway Twitty (October 3, 1981)

After inception of BDS in 1990

 * 1 to 16 - "Mi Vida Loca (My Crazy Life)" - Pam Tillis (February 18, 1995)

Prior to inception of BDS in 1990

 * 4 weeks — "Convoy" by C.W. McCall (December 20, 1975)

After inception of BDS in 1990

 * 5 weeks (tie):
 * "Shameless" by Garth Brooks (November 16, 1991)
 * "It's Your Love" by Tim McGraw and Faith Hill (June 7, 1997)
 * "Have You Forgotten?" by Darryl Worley (April 5, 2003)

Note: These exclude Garth Brooks' "More Than a Memory" (see below), which debuted at #1.

Slowest climb to No. 1

 * 41 weeks — "Find Out Who Your Friends Are" by Tracy Lawrence (June 23, 2007)

Since the introduction of the 100-position chart in 1973

 * All six of these songs set their records after the inception of Nielsen SoundScan in 1990.

Male artists
Note: These three songs also hold the record for the top three highest debuts overall.
 * 1 - "More Than a Memory" - Garth Brooks (September 15, 2007)
 * 16 - "Don't Blink" - Kenny Chesney (September 8, 2007)
 * 17 - "Once in a Lifetime" — Keith Urban (September 2, 2006)

Female artists

 * 20 - "So Small" -- Carrie Underwood (August 18, 2007)
 * 21 - "All Jacked Up" -- Gretchen Wilson (August 13, 2005)
 * 24 - "I'm Gonna Getcha Good!" -- Shania Twain (October 19, 2002)

Most year-end No. 1 songs of the year

 * See Billboard Year-End for more information.


 * 3 — Alan Jackson (1991, 1993, 2003)
 * — Tim McGraw (1997, 1998, 2004)
 * — Willie Nelson (1978, 1982, 1984)
 * — Hank Williams with His Drifting Cowboys (1949, 1951, 1953)


 * 2 - Bill Anderson (1963, 1969)
 * — Rodney Atkins (2006, 2007)
 * — Clint Black (1989, 1990)
 * — Brooks & Dunn (1996, 2001)
 * — Freddie Hart (1971, 1972)
 * — Waylon Jennings (1977, 1978)
 * — Ronnie Milsap (1980, 1985)
 * — John Michael Montgomery (1994, 1995)
 * — Hank Snow and His Rainbow Ranch Boys (1950, 1954)
 * — Conway Twitty (1970, 1973)

Most singles from an album
From Come on Over by Shania Twain
 * 1) "Love Gets Me Every Time" (#1)
 * 2) "Don't Be Stupid (You Know I Love You)" (#6)
 * 3) "You're Still the One" (#1)
 * 4) "From This Moment On" (#6)
 * 5) "Honey, I'm Home" (#1)
 * 6) "That Don't Impress Me Much" (#8)
 * 7) "Man! I Feel Like a Woman!" (#4)
 * 8) "You've Got a Way" (#13)
 * 9) "Come on Over" (#6)
 * 10) "Rock This Country!" (#30)
 * 11) "I'm Holdin' on to Love (to Save My Life)" (#17)

Male
From Diamonds & Dirt by Rodney Crowell
 * 1) "It's Such a Small World"
 * 2) "I Couldn't Leave You If I Tried"
 * 3) "She's Crazy for Leaving"
 * 4) "After All This Time"
 * 5) "Above and Beyond (The Call of Love)"

From 5th Gear by Brad Paisley
 * 1) "Ticks"
 * 2) "Online"
 * 3) "Letter to Me"
 * 4) "I'm Still a Guy"
 * 5) "Waitin' on a Woman" (on re-release only)

Female
From King's Record Shop by Rosanne Cash
 * 1) "The Way We Make a Broken Heart"
 * 2) "If You Change Your Mind"
 * 3) "Tennessee Flat Top Box"
 * 4) "Runaway Train"

From The Woman in Me by Shania Twain
 * 1) "Any Man of Mine"
 * 2) "(If You're Not in It for Love) I'm Outta Here!"
 * 3) "You Win My Love"
 * 4) "No One Needs to Know"

From Carnival Ride by Carrie Underwood
 * 1) "So Small"
 * 2) "All-American Girl"
 * 3) "Last Name"
 * 4) "Just a Dream"

Group
From Roll On by Alabama:
 * 1) "Roll On (Eighteen Wheeler)"
 * 2) "When We Make Love"
 * 3) "If You're Gonna Play in Texas (You Gotta Have a Fiddle in the Band)"
 * 4) "(There's A) Fire in the Night"

From Southern Star by Alabama:
 * 1) "Song of the South"
 * 2) "If I Had You"
 * 3) "High Cotton"
 * 4) "Southern Star"

From Lonely Grill by Lonestar:
 * 1) "Amazed"
 * 2) "Smile"
 * 3) "What About Now"
 * 4) "Tell Her"

Duo
From Why Not Me by The Judds:
 * 1) "Mama He's Crazy"
 * 2) "Why Not Me"
 * 3) "Girls' Night Out"
 * 4) "Love Is Alive"

From Rockin' with the Rhythm by The Judds:
 * 1) "Have Mercy"
 * 2) "Grandpa (Tell Me 'bout the Good Old Days)"
 * 3) "Rockin' with the Rhythm of the Rain"
 * 4) "Cry Myself to Sleep"

From Brand New Man by Brooks & Dunn
 * 1) "Brand New Man"
 * 2) "My Next Broken Heart"
 * 3) "Neon Moon"
 * 4) "Boot Scootin' Boogie"

Most year-end No. 1 albums

 * See Billboard Year-End for more information.


 * 4 — Garth Brooks (1991, 1992, 1995, 1998)
 * — Shania Twain (1996, 1999, 2003, 2005)


 * 3 — Willie Nelson (1976, 1978, 1982)
 * 2 — Alabama (1983, 1985)
 * — Glen Campbell (1968, 1969)
 * — Tim McGraw (1994, 2001)
 * — Charley Pride (1970, 1972)
 * — Charlie Rich (1973, 1974)*
 * — Kenny Rogers (1979, 1980)*
 * — Randy Travis (1987, 1988)
 * — Carrie Underwood (2006, 2007)*
 * Note: Accomplished feat with the same album (Rich's Behind Closed Doors, Rogers' The Gambler and Underwood's Some Hearts).