Weekly US Music Chart: Top 10 Songs – September 13, 2025

  1. Golden – HUNTR/X: EJAE, Audrey Nuna & REI AMI (Label: — | LW: 1 | Peak: 1 | Weeks: 11)
  2. Ordinary – Alex Warren (Label: — | LW: 2 | Peak: 1 | Weeks: 30)
  3. Tears – Sabrina Carpenter (Label: — | LW: — | Peak: 3 | Weeks: 1)
  4. Manchild – Sabrina Carpenter (Label: — | LW: 7 | Peak: 1 | Weeks: 13)
  5. Your Idol – Saja Boys: Andrew Choi, Neckwav, Danny Chung, Kevin Woo & samUIL Lee (Label: — | LW: 4 | Peak: 4 | Weeks: 11)
  6. Soda Pop – Saja Boys: Andrew Choi, Neckwav, Danny Chung, Kevin Woo & samUIL Lee (Label: — | LW: 5 | Peak: 5 | Weeks: 10)
  7. What I Want – Morgan Wallen Featuring Tate McRae (Label: — | LW: 3 | Peak: 1 | Weeks: 16)
  8. Love Me Not – Ravyn Lenae (Label: — | LW: 6 | Peak: 5 | Weeks: 23)
  9. How It’s Done – HUNTR/X: EJAE, Audrey Nuna & REI AMI (Label: — | LW: 9 | Peak: 9 | Weeks: 10)
  10. Lose Control – Teddy Swims (Label: — | LW: 8 | Peak: 1 | Weeks: 107)

🎤 Weekly Chart Commentary – September 13, 2025

The No. 1 story

“Golden” won’t blink. HUNTR/X (feat. EJAE, Audrey Nuna & REI AMI) holds No. 1 for the 11th week. It doesn’t hang around; it grows, taking the week’s biggest airplay gain in the process of rebuffing a stubborn No. 2 in the shape of Alex Warren’s “Ordinary.” Warren’s record is the definition of stickiness—30 weeks in, a former No. 1 still stuck in the No. 2 groove.

The Sabrina Carpenter flood

It’s a Sabrina Carpenter tidal wave. “Tears” comes in at No. 3 as the week’s highest chart entry, and it’s just the front door to a whole house party. “Manchild” snaps back up to No. 4 (and rides out the week’s biggest digital sales spike), and a half-dozen Carpenter tracks in the Top 40 are no fluke: They feature “Nobody’s Son” (12), “My Man On Willpower” (15), “When Did You Get Hot?” (17), “Sugar Talking” (20), “Go Go Juice” (24), “House Tour” (27), “Never Getting Laid” (30), “We Almost Broke Up Again Last Night” (31), “Goodbye” (33), and “Don’t Worry I’ll Make You Worry” (39). That’s not a ripple—it’s an album-week spike where fans didn’t cherry-pick a single; they binge-listened to the entire ride.

Other top-tier moves

Saja Boys are back in summer climb with a smooth one-two in mid-10: “Your Idol” at No. 5 and “Soda Pop” at No. 6. Morgan Wallen’s footprint remains gargantuan even as single tracks go up and down: “What I Want” dips to No. 7 after a No. 1 beginnings earlier in its career, with “I Got Better” (13), “Just In Case” (19), and “I’m The Problem” (26) still very much in the running. Further below he’s still represented with “20 Cigarettes” (71), “Miami” (feat. Lil Wayne & Rick Ross) (85), “I Ain’t Coming Back” (feat. Post Malone) (87), and “Superman” (91).

Slow-burners & long runners

Teddy Swims’ “Lose Control” comes back in the top 10 at No. 10, steady after 107 weeks. Two years on the chart and back inside the top 10 isn’t nostalgia; it’s cultural stickiness. Elsewhere, Benson Boone’s “Beautiful Things” (No. 23, 84 weeks) and Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” (No. 16, 73 weeks) continue to show months—sometimes years—on the chart are possible when records cross formats.

Country pulse

Bailey Zimmerman & Luke Combs achieve a new high with “Backup Plan” (38), and solo Luke’s “Back In The Saddle” (56) keeps climbing. Riser Zach Top enters with a few entries—“Good Times & Tan Lines” at 75 and “South Of Sanity” at 98—with potential for movement from both stream and format crossovers. Jelly Roll enters solo with “Heart Of Stone” (82) and in festival guise on Marshmello x Jelly Roll’s “Holy Water” (93).

Global pop & K-pop

TWICE’s JEONGYEON, JIHYO & CHAEYOUNG move “Takedown” up to No. 58 as TWICE’s “Strategy” holds at a 59. KATSEYE remain in contention with “Gabriela” (64) and “Gnarly” (100), and BLACKPINK’s “Jump” makes a comeback at 86. On the heels of Saja Boys’ double chart-clim

Catalog glow-ups & curiosities

Two catalog anomalies liven up the low ends. Radiohead’s “Let Down” (94) records a third week, and Coldplay’s “Sparks” (79) reaches eight weeks. Whenever deep tracks of the ’90s/’00s materialize in such a way, it very well might mean a sync, a viral moment, or both.

New & noteworthy movers

Olivia Dean’s “Man I Need” jumped 27 positions to No. 55—the week’s biggest-streaming gainer—based on actual word-of-mouth momentum. Key Glock’s “She Ready” enters at 97, giving hip-hop a holiday-end bump. Gunna’s “wgft” (feat. Burna Boy, 72) continues Afrobeats-to-hip-hop crossover busywork, and Fuerza Regida (“Marlboro Rojo,” 78) and Dareyes de la Sierra (“Frecuencia,” 89) hold regional Mexican’s mainstream ground.

Four trends that define the week

  1. Airplay muscle still seals the deal. “Golden” isn’t just a streaming darling; radio is peaking at the right time.
  2. Album weeks matter—hugely. Carpenter’s dozen Top-40 titles are textbook streaming-era impact.
  3. Longevity is currency. Swims, Boone, and Shaboozey show how long a smash can live.
  4. Global plurality is the norm. K-pop, regional Mexican, Afrobeats—braided into one chart.

Top 10 snapshot

  1. Golden — HUNTR/X: EJAE, Audrey Nuna & REI AMI
  2. Ordinary — Alex Warren
  3. Tears — Sabrina Carpenter (debut)
  4. Manchild — Sabrina Carpenter
  5. Your Idol — Saja Boys
  6. Soda Pop — Saja Boys
  7. What I Want — Morgan Wallen feat. Tate McRae
  8. Love Me Not — Ravyn Lenae
  9. How It’s Done — HUNTR/X
  10. Lose Control — Teddy Swims

Key stats

  • Biggest Airplay Gain: “Golden” — HUNTR/X
  • Highest Debut: “Tears” — Sabrina Carpenter (No. 3)
  • Biggest Digital Sales Gain: “Manchild” — Sabrina Carpenter
  • Biggest Streaming Gain: “Man I Need” — Olivia Dean (+27 to No. 55)
  • Longest-Running in Top 10: “Lose Control” — Teddy Swims (107 weeks total)

A clear No. 1 with newly sparked airplay fuel; a pop event hit filling the corridors; country and world pop stable; and a mid-table more competitive than appearing. If you want a vision of 2025 listening—how we switch back and forward

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