Only Two Dancehall Albums Charted in 2025 as Jamaicans Secured Six Billboard Reggae Entries

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Despite commanding global streams and shaping pop culture conversations, dancehall struggled to convert that dominance into album success in 2025, with just two entries on the Billboard Reggae Albums ChartVybz Kartel’s Viking (Vybz Is King) and Armanii’s The Impact. The disparity has reignited debate about the genre’s commercial structure, as reggae’s legacy catalogue once again outperformed contemporary releases, led by icons such as Bob Marley and Peter Tosh.

Kartel’s 10th anniversary reissue of Viking (Vybz Is King) debuted at No. 10 in January, becoming the first dancehall album to chart for the year — a testament to the power of strategic re-releases in a catalogue-driven market. Nearly a year later, Armanii secured the genre’s only other dancehall entry when The Impact debuted at No. 10 in December. Meanwhile, reggae maintained a firm grip on the chart, with projects like Uprising (1980) by Bob Marley entering for the first time decades after its release, and Chronixx’s Exile emerging as one of the few contemporary albums to break through, peaking at No. 5.

Further reinforcing reggae’s enduring appeal, Greatest Hits by Peter Tosh and One, Two by Sister Nancy — the latter earning her first-ever Billboard entry — benefited from global reissue campaigns and Record Store Day momentum. These results underline a clear trend: legacy branding, vinyl culture, and nostalgia-driven strategies are outperforming new releases, even as younger audiences continue to stream dancehall at scale.

The numbers paint a revealing picture. Of roughly 11 chart debuts in 2025, only a handful came from Jamaican acts, and even fewer represented modern dancehall. The gap between streaming success and album-equivalent performance suggests a structural challenge for the genre, particularly in how fans consume music in the streaming era. As dancehall continues to dominate digitally, the question now is whether its leading acts can adapt their release strategies to match the enduring commercial power of reggae’s catalogue — or risk remaining underrepresented on one of the genre’s most visible charts.

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