YouTube is pulling its streaming data from Billboard charts
After Billboard announced changes to how streams are counted, YouTube still doesn’t agree. Here’s why.
YouTube steps back from Billboard’s music charts
YouTube has announced it will stop providing its streaming data to Billboard’s industry-leading US music charts. The decision follows Billboard’s announcement that it is changing how streams are weighted within its chart rankings, with those changes designed to better reflect how people actually consume music today.
On paper, that sounds reasonable. As YouTube points out, streaming dominates music consumption, accounting for 84% of recorded music revenue in the US. Billboard’s update intends to modernize its charts to reflect that.
But for YouTube, the changes still don’t go far enough.
How is Billboard changing its rankings
Billboard’s update focuses on how streams are converted into “album units”, which are used to rank album sales on charts like Billboard 200. The rule is that 10 individual song plays equal to one album unit. What’s changing is how many streams are required to reach one album unit. This depends on whether those plays come from paid subscriptions or ad-supported streams.
Here’s what the changes are, and what they mean in practice.
Ad-supported streams
Currently, 3,750 ad-supported streams are equal to one album unit. Under the new system, that number drops to 2,500 streams. This means it will take around 33% fewer ad-supported streams to count as an album sale.
Paid or subscription streams
Currently, 1,250 paid/subscription streams are equal to one album unit. Under the new system, that number drops to 1,000 streams. This means it will take 20% fewer paid streams to count as an album sale.
So why is YouTube still unhappy?
While the gap between paid and ad-supported streams is reducing from a 1:3 ratio to roughly 1:2.5, YouTube believes this difference shouldn’t exist at all.
From YouTube’s perspective, every stream should be counted “fairly and equally, whether it is subscription-based or ad-supported”. The platform believes that every fan matters, and those ad-supported listeners are still fans contributing to an artist’s success. By continuing to favor paid streams, YouTube says Billboard is still undervaluing the massive engagement from those fans who don’t have a music subscription.
What happens next
After a decade-long partnership and extensive discussions, YouTube notes that Billboard has failed to make meaningful changes. Billboard’s updated methodology will come into effect for charts published on January 17, 2026, which includes data from January 2-8, 2026. From January 16, YouTube will no longer contribute streaming data to Billboard’s charts.
The immediate impact means that Billboard charts will be missing data from one of the largest platforms in the world. Longer term, there could be concern for YouTube. As TechCrunch points out, labels and artists may instead prioritize paid-streaming platforms. That could mean less focus on YouTube, especially as Spotify and other platforms now host music videos themselves.
But, there’s still room for compromise. It’s clearly a negotiation tactic, and YouTube has made it clear it wants to return to Billboard’s charts if a more equitable approach can be reached. Until then, YouTube concludes that you can check out what music is popular on YouTube’s own charts here.