Bruno Mars is back — and he did not just return quietly. The Romantic, his fourth studio album, debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 dated March 14, earning 186,000 equivalent album units in its first week. More than just a chart milestone, the debut marks the first time in his career that a Mars album has opened directly at the summit — a title that had somehow eluded him through three decades of defining pop music.
The achievement caps a 13-year journey back to the top. Mars last held the No. 1 position in March 2013 with Unorthodox Jukebox, an album that took nearly three months to climb there. The gap between chart toppers is the longest for any living solo male artist since Paul McCartney returned to No. 1 in 2018 with Egypt Station, after a 36-year absence. History, in other words, was always part of this moment.

A Decade in the Making
The road to The Romantic was not without its near-misses. 24K Magic peaked at No. 2 in 2016, blocked at the top by Metallica’s Hardwired… to Self-Destruct. His 2021 collaboration with Anderson .Paak under the Silk Sonic banner, An Evening with Silk Sonic, also stalled at No. 2. Two heartbreakingly close calls — both now erased.
The album also helped Mars jump to No. 1 on the Billboard Artist 100, topping the Artist 100, Billboard 200, and Hot 100 simultaneously for the first time in his career. All nine songs from The Romantic landed on the Hot 100 in the same week — a full sweep that underscores just how dominant this release has been.
How The Romantic Earned Its No. 1
The numbers behind the debut tell a story of a fanbase that showed up in every format available:
- 93,500 pure album sales, debuting at No. 1 on Top Album Sales
- 90,500 streaming equivalent album units — representing 93.95 million on-demand streams, Mars’ best streaming week ever for an album
- 2,000 track equivalent album units
- 48,000 vinyl units — a career-best single week on the format
- Released across 10 vinyl variants, plus CD, cassette, and digital download
- All versions contain the same nine tracks
Mars was also named the 2026 Record Store Day ambassador, partnering with more than 200 record stores across the U.S. to host listening parties for The Romantic on February 25— a grassroots push that clearly paid off at the register.
The Single That Set Everything Up
The Romantic did not arrive cold. Its lead single, I Just Might, released January 9, became Mars‘ 10th No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and his first track ever to debut directly at the top of that chart. It held No. 1 for two consecutive weeks and led the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart for seven straight weeks. A second single, Risk It All, followed on February 27 and debuted at No. 4 on the Hot 100 the same week the album dropped. The momentum was already built before the album even had a chance to speak for itself.
Where the Rest of the Chart Landed
The Romantic was not the only story on this week’s Billboard 200. Several notable debuts and returns rounded out the top 10:
- No. 2 — Bad Bunny’s Debà Tirar Más Fotos with 77,000 units
- No. 3 — Morgan Wallen’s I’m the Problem with 75,000 units
- No. 4 — Don Toliver’s Octane with 66,000 units
- No. 5 — Olivia Dean’s The Art of Loving with 60,000 units
- No. 6 — Megan Moroney’s Cloud 9 (last week’s No. 1) with 55,000 units
- No. 7 — Gorillaz’s The Mountain debuted with 53,000 units, their sixth top 10
- No. 8 — BLACKPINK’s Deadline debuted with 52,000 units, their third top 10
- No. 9 — Taylor Swift’s The Life of a Showgirl held with just under 43,000 units
- No. 10 — Mitski’s Nothing’s About to Happen to Me debuted with nearly 43,000 units, her strongest opening week ever
The Romantic also reached No. 1 in Canada and landed in the top 10 across Australia, the UK, Germany, Japan, France, and several other markets— a global statement that confirmed this was not just a domestic moment. Mars is back, and the world noticed.

