Country Music Just Snagged Billboard’s Top Artist Title and Ended a 32-Year Drought

Morgan Wallen performing on stage in a camo cap with "W" logo and brown t-shirt, holding a mic as he becomes Billboard's Top Artist of 2025, the first male country star to claim the title since Garth Brooks in 1993 and ending a 32-year drought.
It took 32 long years, but country music is finally back on Billboard’s throne.

Morgan Wallen just made history by becoming Billboard’s Top Artist of 2025, and it is not just a personal victory. It is a game-changing moment that signals the full-blown rise of country in a music world that has long been dominated by pop and hip-hop. The last male country star to pull this off was Garth Brooks in 1993, and Wallen’s win is the kind of industry-shaking moment that makes you sit up and say that country is back where it belongs.

This was not just a lucky win. Wallen’s reign is backed by some of the wildest numbers we have seen in years. His fourth studio album, I’m the Problem, did not just debut at number one. It stayed there for 12 straight weeks, making it the biggest album debut of 2025. If that is not dominance, nothing is. And the numbers kept rolling in. He had more songs on the Billboard Hot 100 this year than any other artist. We are talking about 41 songs. Not four. Not fourteen. But forty-one.

Among those 41 tracks was a red-hot number one with Tate McRae called “What I Want,” a cross-genre collaboration that blended country and pop so well it made genre lines feel irrelevant. The song pulled in over 31 million streams in a single week and marked McRae’s first number one while giving Wallen his fourth. That same week, Wallen pulled off something no country artist had ever done. He held the top three spots on the Hot 100 at the same time, with “What I Want”, “Just in Case”, and the album’s title track all sitting at the top.

And yet, the CMAs gave him nothing this year. You read that right. Zero awards. The most dominant artist in all of music was left watching from the sidelines while others accepted trophies. Wallen did not complain. He simply posted a quiet flex on Instagram and said it best with, “I like to let my fans do the talking.” And clearly, the fans responded through streams, ticket sales, and airplay, and Billboard heard them loud and clear.

What is even more impressive is that Wallen is not slowing down. He has a massive “I’m the Problem” tour lined up for 2026, and there are whispers that a deluxe version of the album could drop any time. His work ethic is matched only by his ability to transform country music into a full-blown pop culture force.

This is not only about Wallen’s rise. His win proves the explosive growth of country music as a whole. Country is no longer confined to dusty honky-tonks. It is taking over stadiums, dominating playlists, and now topping the charts. Wallen’s signature sound, a mix of country grit, rock attitude, and pop catchiness, is exactly what this generation was waiting for. And now that the 32-year drought is finally over, country music is not just knocking on the door of pop culture. It has already kicked it wide open.

So go ahead and raise your glass. Morgan Wallen did not just win a title. He brought country music back to the top of the mountain and proved it is here to stay.