The Weeknd’s ‘House of Balloons’ checked a major box this week. Chart tracker ChartData confirmed the album has now spent 52 consecutive weeks on the Billboard 200. That’s one full year on the chart, as of May 5, 2026.
No cap, that’s a certified flex.
Here’s what makes this milestone hit different. ‘House of Balloons’ didn’t start on a label or with a promo budget. Abel Tesfaye dropped it as a free mixtape back in 2011. No radio push, no industry co-sign. Just raw R&B energy uploaded to the internet, and the world went sideways for it. Republic Records eventually gave it an official commercial release. But the roots of this project are underground. It was built on vibes alone.
And now it’s got 52 weeks on the Billboard 200 to its name.
Chart longevity like this doesn’t happen by accident. The Billboard 200 tracks album activity every single week: streams, downloads, and track equivalent sales. To stay on that chart for a full year, an album needs a consistent audience pulling up to it week after week. Not a spike. Not a moment. A sustained run.
That’s a different kind of clout.
The music industry in 2026 moves fast. Algorithms change, playlists rotate, and attention spans are short. Most projects get their promo window, catch a wave, then fall off. ‘House of Balloons’ is still charting more than 15 years after its original drop. That says something real about how deep this project sits in people’s lives.
The ChartData account shared the milestone on X, and the reaction was immediate. The tweet pulled in nearly 1,800 likes and 169 retweets. Comments were full of people calling the album a classic and crediting The Weeknd for building a new lane in R&B.
And look, that credit is earned. The album landed and didn’t fit neatly into anything. Too moody for pop, too polished for underground rap, too emotional for straight R&B. Abel was doing something nobody had a name for yet. The layered synths, dark confessionals, and late-night atmosphere he built on that tape became a template. Artists have been chasing that sound ever since.
The Weeknd has had no shortage of big moments since then. ‘Blinding Lights’ had one of the longest Billboard Hot 100 runs in history. ‘After Hours’ moved serious numbers. He headlined the Super Bowl LV halftime show in 2021. The Grammy boycott put him at the center of the biggest conversation in music that year. He’s been a major force in every era.
But ‘House of Balloons’ hits different. It was the beginning. Abel introduced his whole sound to the world on his own terms. No label machine driving it. Listeners keep finding their way back to it. Or finding it for the first time.
That’s the move. Not just making a hit. Making something that sticks around long enough to become part of the culture.
One year on the Billboard 200 doesn’t get handed out. It gets earned, week by week, stream by stream. And ‘House of Balloons’ has earned every one of those 52 weeks.
The Weeknd built his name on that tape. Turns out, the tape is still building right along with him.
