Momentum from a historic Grammy night has sent Bad Bunny’s catalog surging across Billboard’s Latin rankings, with the Puerto Rican superstar replacing himself at No. 1 on multiple charts in the United States.

Following the 2026 Grammy Awards, where his album Debí Tirar Más Fotos became the first Spanish-language project to win Album of the Year, consumption of his music spiked dramatically. Streaming and sales gains were so strong that one of his singles overtook another of his own hits atop three key Latin tallies.

“DTMF” climbs back to No. 1 on the Hot Latin Songs, Latin Streaming Songs and Latin Digital Song Sales charts. The track had previously been sitting just below the summit — at No. 2 on the first two rankings and No. 3 on the digital sales list — before renewed interest following his Grammy victory pushed it to the top.

In doing so, “DTMF” displaces “Baile Inolvidable,” which falls to No. 2 on both Hot Latin Songs and Latin Streaming Songs, effectively swapping positions with its chart rival. On Latin Digital Song Sales, “Baile Inolvidable” drops from first to fourth, marking 52 consecutive weeks on the ranking.

Global and U.S. Charts React

Despite not performing “DTMF” during the Grammy telecast — as he was preparing to headline the Super Bowl Halftime Show less than a week later — the song emerged as the biggest beneficiary of his Album of the Year win.

The track holds at No. 1 on the Hot Latin Rhythm Songs chart and reenters the upper tier of both global rankings: the Billboard Global 200 and the Billboard Global Excl. U.S., surging to Nos. 6 and 8, respectively, after sitting outside the top 20.

In the United States, “DTMF” also returns to several all-genre charts. It appears on the Digital Song Sales ranking for only the second time and reaches a new peak, narrowly missing the top 10. The single rebounds to No. 4 on the Streaming Songs chart and reenters the Billboard Hot 100 at No. 10, after previously climbing as high as No. 2.

Catalog Dominance

The scale of Bad Bunny’s resurgence is notable. A total of 28 songs — either as a lead artist or featured act — appear on at least one Billboard chart this week, with many titles occupying multiple rankings simultaneously. The breadth of that presence makes him one of the most dominant acts across U.S. charts in the current frame.

Meanwhile, Debí Tirar Más Fotos continues its own ascent. The album holds at No. 1 on the Top Latin Albums chart and jumps from No. 9 to No. 2 on both the Billboard 200 and the Top Streaming Albums rankings, narrowly missing a return to the summit. It also vaults from No. 17 to No. 11 on the Top Album Sales chart, approaching the top 10 bestsellers in the country, though it slips outside the top tier on the Vinyl Albums list.

The post-Grammy surge underscores Bad Bunny’s enduring commercial strength. With streaming, digital sales and album consumption all rising sharply, the artist’s latest accolades appear to have translated directly into chart dominance — and into a reshuffling of his own hits at the top of the Latin music landscape.