In Honor of 2025, Here Are 25 No. 25 Billboard Hot 100 Hits
Nearly 300 songs have peaked at No. 25 on the Billboard Hot 100, and despite not hitting No. 1 or even the top 10, many remain memorable years or even decades later.
In the 1960s, Rat Packers Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra each extended their iconic legacies with notable No. 25 Hot 100 hits: “You’re Nobody Till Somebody Loves You” and “Summer Wind,” respectively.
In the ‘70s, Billy Joel’s debut hit “Piano Man” rose to No. 25 on the Hot 100. Later in the decade, despite it not being easy being green, Kermit the Frog (with a hand, literally, from Jim Henson) hopped to the same mark with “Rainbow Connection,” his classic banjo-strummed hopeful anthem from The Muppet Movie.
The ‘80s brought No. 25 Hot 100 hits from the likes of Kim Wilde, Scorpions and Prince, while ‘90s songs that reached the rank include entries by Gin Blossoms, Melissa Etheridge and Backstreet Boys.
Since 2000, Dr. Dre (with Eminem), Toby Keith and *NSYNC have all added to the history of renowned No. 25-peaking Hot 100 hits.
(Over on the Billboard 200 albums chart, noteworthy No. 25-peaking collections include Ray Charles’ pioneering Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music; Enya’s mainstream new age breakthrough Watermark; The All-American Rejects’ self-titled debut LP; Jon Batiste’s Grammy Award winner for album of the year, We Are; and ABBA’s Gold: Greatest Hits, which has charted for more than 350 weeks.)
In honor of their enduring legacies, here’s a rundown of 25 No. 25 Hot 100 hits, for 2025.
Happy new year!
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“You’re Nobody Till Somebody Loves You,” Dean Martin
Hot 100 peak date: Jan. 30, 1965
On the first Hot 100 of 2025, dated Jan. 4, the late legend ranks in the top 10 with “Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!” Martin appeared on the first Hot 100, dated Aug. 4, 1958, and boasts a 66 year and five-month span of gracing the chart. He shares the record span with, also via resurgent holiday hits, the late Chuck Berry, Nat King Cole, Perry Como and Frank Sinatra.
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“Summer Wind,” Frank Sinatra
Hot 100 peak date: Oct. 1, 1966
Joining Martin in the latest Hot 100’s top 20, Sinatra ranks at No. 18 with his jolly version of “Jingle Bells.”
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“Try a Little Tenderness,” Otis Redding
Hot 100 peak date: Jan. 28, 1967
The song dates to 1932, and was recorded on 1946’s The Voice of Frank Sinatra, his debut LP. It was also central to the 1991 film The Commitments, with the movie’s namesake group taking its version to No. 67 on the Hot 100. In 2015, the song gained entrance to the Grammy Hall of Fame.
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“She’s a Rainbow,” The Rolling Stones
Hot 100 peak date: Jan. 27, 1968
The colorful track has since scored numerous commercial and TV syncs.
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“Piano Man,” Billy Joel
Hot 100 peak date: April 20, 1974
“I always think of myself as being in a band,” Joel mused to Billboard in 2014. “I know it’s called ‘Billy Joel,’ I’m the guy out front singing, I do the writing. But I always feel like when we’re on stage, it’s a band effort, and I was always in bands all through my teenage years. People always think I was just playing in a piano bar, [but] I only did that for about six months. The rest of the time I was playing in bands. One of my fantasies was always: Wouldn’t it be cool if I was just in a blues band playing Hammond B3, with the shades, sitting in the back, and let somebody else be out front making a fool out of themselves?”
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“Good Hearted Woman,” Waylon & Willie
Hot 100 peak date: April 3, 1976
The song became the first of Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson’s four No. 1 collaborations on the Hot Country Songs chart. Their last, 1985’s “Highwayman,” also includes Johnny Cash and Kris Kristofferson.
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“Theme From Close Encounters,” Meco
Hot 100 peak date: Feb. 18, 1978
The single followed Meco’s 1977 two-week disco Hot 100 No. 1 “Star Wars Theme/Cantina Band.” In 1980, he again mined the franchise with “Empire Strikes Back (Medley),” which blasted to No. 18.
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“Thank You for Being a Friend,” Andrew Gold
Hot 100 peak date: April 15, 1978
Less than a decade later, one of Gold’s two signature songs segued from radio and turntables to TV, as Cynthia Fee famously covered it as the theme to NBC’s beloved sitcom The Golden Girls.
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“Macho Man,” Village People
Hot 100 peak date: Sept. 2, 1978
Following “Macho Man,” the Village People charted fellow dance floor staples “Y.M.C.A.” (No. 2 peak on the Hot 100), “In the Navy” (No. 3) and “Go West” (No. 45), all in 1979. In 2024, “Y.M.C.A.” tallied five weeks at No. 1 on Dance/Electronic Digital Song Sales.
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“Rainbow Connection,” Kermit (Jim Henson)
Hot 100 peak date: Nov. 24, 1979
Muppet master Jim Henson notched two top 40 Hot 100 hits: “Rubber Duckie” via Ernie (No. 16, 1970), and Kermit the Frog’s sing-along favorite from The Muppet Movie. Paul Williams, who wrote the latter with Kenneth Ascher, told Billboard in 2019 that the song was inspired by Jiminy Cricket’s Pinocchio classic “When You Wish Upon a Star.”
“‘How do we do that for Kermit, you know?’” Williams recalled. “This is Kermit’s ‘I am’ song. He’s responsible and easygoing. He’s remarkable. The writing of the song – ‘What’s on the other side?’ – got us into a place where Kermit could be somebody that was amazed … the questions are even holier than the answers.”
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“Theme From Magnum P.I.,” Mike Post
Hot 100 peak date: May 8, 1982
Post previously hit No. 10 with fellow TV instrumentals “The Rockford Files” in 1975 and “The Theme From Hill Street Blues” in 1981.
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“Kids in America,” Kim Wilde
Hot 100 peak date: Aug. 14, 1982
Following her debut pop-punk classic, Wilde hit No. 1 on the Hot 100 in 1987 with her cover of The Supremes’ “You Keep Me Hangin’ On.”
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“Kiss the Bride,” Elton John
Hot 100 peak date: Oct. 1, 1983
The song hit the Hot 100’s top 10 at last … as part of John and Dua Lipa’s “Cold Heart (Pnau Remix)” mashup, which rose to No. 7 in 2022.
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“Rock You Like a Hurricane,” Scorpions
Hot 100 peak date: May 26, 1984
The single is the hard rock band’s second-highest-charting Hot 100 hit. Ballad “Wind of Change” reached No. 3 in 1991.
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“Take Me With U,” Prince and the Revolution duet with Apollonia
Hot 100 peak date: March 23, 1985
The track became the fifth Hot 100 hit from Prince’s seminal Purple Rain soundtrack, following four top 10s: “When Doves Cry” (No. 1 for five weeks), “Let’s Go Crazy” (No. 1, two weeks), the title cut (No. 2) and “I Would Die 4 U” (No. 8).
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“Till I Loved You,” Barbra Streisand & Don Johnson
Hot 100 peak date: Dec. 3, 1988
The ballad between Streisand and her then-boyfriend became her 20th top 40 Hot 100 hit and his second. “This guy was lean and tan, with an easy grin (and good teeth),” Streisand wrote in her 2023 memoir My Name Is Barbra. “His name was Don Johnson, and he was the heartthrob of the moment on the TV series Miami Vice. I have to admit, I’m very attracted to attractive men. (OK, so I’m superficial!) It’s almost like an aesthetic thing … like a piece of art. I collect!”
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“Hey Jealousy,” Gin Blossoms
Hot 100 peak date: Oct. 16, 1993
The Arizona jangly alt-rockers also hit No. 25 with their second Hot 100 hit, “Found Out About You.” In 1996, they reached the top 10 with the double-sided “Til I Hear It From You”/“Follow You Down.”
“That’s all you could really hope for, is like, a legacy,” lead singer Robin Wilson in 2022 told Billboard of the band, which has tour dates lined up this year. “To retain your credibility, and your ability to sell tickets. And it’s just cool to be a part of the big rock story. And that’s all I’ve ever really wanted to do: be in a band. So, it still just amazes me that I’m still doing it.”
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“Come to My Window,” Melissa Etheridge
Hot 100 peak date: Aug. 13, 1994
The single became Etheridge’s first of five consecutive top 40 Hot 100 hits through 1996, a run including the top 10 “I’m the Only One.” She added one more in 2005, the No. 32-peaking Janis Joplin tribute “Cry Baby”/“Piece of My Heart” with Joss Stone.
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“I Like It, I Love It,” Tim McGraw
Hot 100 peak date: Sept. 16, 1995
The joyous single became the third of McGraw’s 26 No. 1s on the Hot Country Songs chart.
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“Larger Than Life,” Backstreet Boys
Hot 100 peak date: Nov. 13, 1999
The song is one of the group’s nine top 10s on the Pop Airplay chart. It followed their first No. 1, the classic (and no longer quite so mysterious lyrically) “I Want It That Way.”
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“Forgot About Dre,” Dr. Dre feat. Eminem
Hot 100 peak date: March 25, 2000
The track became the first of the hip-hop superstars’ six Hot 100 team-ups. Dr. Dre’s sixth top 40 entry, it marked Eminem’s second, after “My Name Is” reached No. 36 in 1999.
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“I’m a Believer,” Smash Mouth
Hot 100 peak date: Sept. 15, 2021
The band updated The Monkees’ Neil Diamond-written classic, which dominated the Hot 100 for seven weeks in 1966-67, for the Shrek soundtrack. Monkee Micky Dolenz sings the song solo as the closing cut on his newly released album recorded at The Troubadour in Los Angeles.
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“Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue (The Angry American),” Toby Keith
Hot 100 peak date: Aug. 3, 2002
The patriotic single stands as one of the late Keith’s 20 No. 1s on Hot Country Songs.
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“Hall of Fame,” The Script feat. will.i.am
Hot 100 peak date: Feb. 23, 2013
Among its many syncs, the empowerment anthem has been heard at NFL Hall of Fame Games.
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“Better Place,” *NSYNC
Hot 100 peak date: Oct. 14, 2023
Following a dozen Hot 100 hits in 1998-2002, the band returned with the single from the Trolls Band Together soundtrack. The quintet’s Justin Timberlake called the song “a love letter to our fans.”
As Trolls Band Together chronicles a boy band reunion, the franchise’s producer/music supervisor Gina Shay told Billboard that the movie’s plot had been set long before any plans of an *NSYNC comeback. “The movie’s story [had] been solid for about four years,” she said, “so it was just that perfect confluence of a song to reunite *NSYNC.”
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