The download era

Top Songs of 2009

The Billboard Year-End Top 20, led by “Boom Boom Pow” by The Black Eyed Peas.

The musical landscape of 2009

Digital singles became central to hit consumption. Television competitions, online communities and portable music libraries created new paths to mass popularity.

Beyonce appears 2 times in the Top 20, making the artist one of the clearest recurring presences in this year’s list.

What to listen for

Notice how concise openings, immediate hooks and cross-genre collaborations suit an environment increasingly organized around individual tracks.

This list contains 16 different credited artists. The number gives a quick indication of whether the year was concentrated among repeat hitmakers or spread across a wider field.

Billboard Year-End Top 20 songs of 2009

RankSongArtistListen
1 Boom Boom Pow The Black Eyed Peas Spotify ↗
2 Poker Face Lady Gaga Spotify ↗
3 Just Dance Lady Gaga Spotify ↗
4 I Gotta Feeling The Black Eyed Peas Spotify ↗
5 Love Story Taylor Swift Spotify ↗
6 Right Round Flo Rida Spotify ↗
7 Im Yours Jason Mraz Spotify ↗
8 Single Ladies Beyonce Spotify ↗
9 Heartless Kanye West Spotify ↗
10 You Belong with Me Taylor Swift Spotify ↗
11 Use Somebody Kings of Leon Spotify ↗
12 Halo Beyonce Spotify ↗
13 Gives You Hell The All-American Rejects Spotify ↗
14 Dead and Gone TI Spotify ↗
15 Hot n Cold Katy Perry Spotify ↗
16 Day n Nite Kid Cudi Spotify ↗
17 You Found Me The Fray Spotify ↗
18 Down Jay Sean Spotify ↗
19 Knock You Down Keri Hilson Spotify ↗
20 Blame It Jamie Foxx Spotify ↗

Build a 2009 playlist

Start with “Boom Boom Pow” by The Black Eyed Peas, then alternate familiar high-ranking records with contrasting selections from the lower half of the list.

Open the playlist builder

How this page should be used

Year-End charts summarize performance across an extended chart year. They are not simply a list of songs that reached number one, and historical methodology has changed. Treat this page as a guided listening resource and compact chart-history reference rather than a mathematical comparison with other eras.