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Burna Boy has set a new Billboard record, becoming the African artist with the most Billboard Hot 100 entries after his Shakira collaboration ‘Dai Dai’ debuted on the chart at number 75.

How Burna Boy set the Billboard record
The debut of ‘Dai Dai’ gave the Nigerian superstar his ninth career Hot 100 entry, breaking a tie with Tems, who sits on eight. The milestone cements his place as the most charted African act in the history of the prestigious United States singles ranking.
Beyond the raw number, the achievement also makes Burna Boy the first African artist to appear on the Hot 100 in six consecutive years, charting every year from 2021 through 2026, a run that underlines his staying power.
The World Cup boost
‘Dai Dai,’ his team-up with global pop icon Shakira, gained major momentum after the pair performed it live at the World Cup opening ceremony. Performing on one of the planet’s largest stages pushed the song into new markets and lifted its streaming and sales numbers.
Linking an Afrobeats heavyweight with a worldwide superstar on a tournament anthem proved a powerful formula, exposing Burna Boy’s sound to hundreds of millions of viewers at once.
Afrobeats on the world stage
The record adds to a growing list of global milestones for Nigerian music. Burna Boy, a Grammy winner with sold-out arena tours, has been one of the genre’s leading ambassadors, helping turn Afrobeats from a regional sound into a global force.
His continued presence on American charts signals that African artists are no longer occasional visitors but regular contenders in the mainstream pop conversation.
Why it matters
Setting a new Billboard record matters because chart performance shapes how the global industry values African talent, from festival bookings to label investment and brand deals. Each milestone widens the door for the next generation of Nigerian acts.
For Burna Boy, the achievement reinforces his status as one of Africa’s most successful musical exports. For Afrobeats, it is further proof that the genre’s rise is durable, not a passing trend.
Building Nigeria’s chart legacy
Burna Boy’s achievement sits within a remarkable era for Nigerian music on the global stage. Alongside peers such as Wizkid, Davido, Tems and Rema, he has helped push Afrobeats from clubs and street corners in Lagos to stadiums, award shows and playlists worldwide. Each chart milestone strengthens the case that African pop is a permanent fixture in the mainstream, not a passing novelty.
For the wider industry, these breakthroughs translate into real opportunities: bigger touring markets, lucrative brand partnerships and growing investment in local studios, labels and talent. Younger artists now grow up with proof that global success is achievable from home. Burna Boy’s record-setting run, capped by a World Cup stage with one of pop’s biggest names, is another marker of how far the movement has come.
The collaboration itself speaks to Afrobeats’ growing pull within global pop. A worldwide icon like Shakira choosing a Nigerian superstar for a World Cup anthem would have been unthinkable a decade ago. Today it is a sign of how central the sound has become to mainstream music. For Burna Boy, the partnership broadens his audience even further, introducing his catalogue to fans across Latin America, Europe and beyond. Each crossover moment like this strengthens the commercial case for African artists and widens the lane for the talents following in his footsteps.
Viorah TV will keep tracking Nigerian artists as they break new ground on the world’s biggest charts.