Written By: Eram Shaikh

The fastest K-pop song to reach 100 million views is BTS’s “Butter” at just 21 hours. BLACKPINK’s “How You Like That” follows at 32 hours, with “Dynamite” at 24 hours holding second place.

In this article, you’ll see which groups dominate the leaderboard, how each song broke records, and what made fandoms stream nonstop. 

We’ll also explain how these records are tracked and calculated.

Fastest K-Pop Songs to Reach 100M Views (2026 Leaderboard)

Here are the ten MVs that reached 100 million views faster than anyone else:

RankSongArtistTime to 100M Views
1ButterBTS~21 Hours
2DynamiteBTS~24 Hours
3How You Like ThatBLACKPINK~32 Hours
4Pink VenomBLACKPINK~35 Hours (1.4 Days)
5Boy With Luv (ft. Halsey)BTS~37 Hours (1.6 Days)
6Ice Cream (with Selena Gomez)BLACKPINK~41 Hours (1.7 Days)
7LALISALISA~49 Hours (2.0 Days)
8Permission to DanceBTS~50 Hours (2.1 Days)
9Life Goes OnBTS~51 Hours (2.1 Days)
10Kill This LoveBLACKPINK~62 Hours (2.6 Days)

These numbers show what happens when millions of fans work together across time zones. Every comeback became a global event, with fandoms from Seoul to São Paulo streaming nonstop.

Fastest K-Pop Songs to Reach 100M Views
Source: Gemini

Let’s break down what made each of these songs smash records so fast.

1. Butter

Song NameButter
ArtistBTS
Release DateMay 21, 2021
GenreDance-pop
Previous Record Holder It BeatDynamite (BTS)

Butter dropped in summer 2021 with smooth vocals and choreography that instantly went viral on TikTok. The bassline was addictive, and the hook stayed in your head for days.

ARMY coordinated streaming across every timezone. I remember waking up at 3 AM just to watch the premiere with thousands of other fans in the live chat. The MV beat Dynamite’s record by three hours. 

Big Hit released different versions to keep everyone watching. Butter became the Most-Viewed K-pop Music Video in 24 Hours, setting a record that still stands in 2026.

2. Dynamite

Song NameDynamite
ArtistBTS
Release DateAugust 21, 2020
GenreDisco-pop
Previous Record Holder It BeatHow You Like That (BLACKPINK)

Dynamite was BTS’s first fully English song. That disco sound brought back the 70s with colorful sets and retro outfits that made you smile instantly.

This song dropped during lockdown when everyone needed something happy. It crushed How You Like That’s time by eight hours. ARMY and casual listeners both streamed like crazy. 

The song gave BTS their first number one on the Billboard Hot 100. Dynamite has now become the BTS Most Viewed Song with over 2 billion views on YouTube, making it their most-watched MV ever.

3. How You Like That

Song NameHow You Like That
ArtistBLACKPINK
Release DateJune 26, 2020
GenreHip-hop/EDM
Previous Record Holder It BeatBoy With Luv (BTS)

How You Like That came back hard with heavy beats and high fashion looks. That “look up in the sky, it’s a bird, it’s a plane” part became iconic the second it dropped.

BLINKs had waited over a year for new music. The hunger was real. Everyone I knew had alarms set for the premiere. The song won Song of the Year at the 2020 MTV VMAs, adding another milestone to the BLACKPINK awards list

Watching Rosé hit those high notes during that VMA performance reminded everyone why BLACKPINK owns the stage.

4. Pink Venom

Song NamePink Venom
ArtistBLACKPINK
Release DateAugust 19, 2022
GenreHip-hop
Previous Record Holder It BeatHow You Like That (BLACKPINK)

Pink Venom mixed traditional Korean instruments with trap beats. That geomungo sound over the bass created something completely fresh and unexpected.

The Korean instrumental part went crazy on TikTok. People who didn’t even listen to K-pop started using that sound for edits. 

The song came before their BORN PINK album, building anticipation perfectly. Jennie’s rap verse had fans learning the Korean lyrics phonetically just to sing along.

5. Boy With Luv (ft. Halsey)

Song NameBoy With Luv (ft. Halsey)
ArtistBTS
Release DateApril 12, 2019
GenreSynth-pop
Previous Record Holder It BeatKill This Love (BLACKPINK)

Boy With Luv brought Halsey into the BTS universe with pastel colors everywhere. The song talked about small moments of love instead of grand gestures.

Halsey’s fans joined ARMY for streaming parties. Twitter was full of countdown threads and streaming tips. The MV beat Kill This Love and introduced a softer side of BTS. 

The “oh my my my” hook got stuck in everyone’s head for months. The performance at the Billboard Music Awards later that year had the entire arena singing along.

6. Ice Cream (with Selena Gomez)

Song NameIce Cream (with Selena Gomez)
ArtistBLACKPINK
Release DateAugust 28, 2020
GenreBubblegum pop
Previous Record Holder It BeatN/A

Ice Cream was pure candy with pastel colors everywhere. Selena Gomez added star power, and the whole vibe was cute and flirty instead of BLACKPINK’s usual fierce energy.

This song split opinions. Some fans wanted more girl-crush concepts, but the collaboration brought Selenators and BLINKs together for a streaming event. 

The switch-up showed BLACKPINK’s range. The ice cream truck scenes and sweet lyrics gave summer 2020 a lighter moment during lockdown.

7. LALISA

Song NameLALISA
ArtistLISA
Release DateSeptember 10, 2021
GenreHip-hop/Thai pop
Previous Record Holder It BeatN/A

LALISA was Lisa’s solo debut, and she came in strong with confidence. Thai cultural elements filled the MV with temple visuals and traditional outfits mixed with modern streetwear.

Lisa used her birth name as the title, which felt personal and bold. BLINKs and Lisa’s solo fans worked together to make her debut massive. 

The choreography was intense, showing off the dancing skills she’s known for. The “say lalisa love me” chant became an instant fan favorite at concerts.

8. Permission to Dance

Song NamePermission to Dance
ArtistBTS
Release DateJuly 9, 2021
GenrePop
Previous Record Holder It BeatN/A

Permission to Dance surprised everyone by dropping right after Butter. The choreography included sign language, making the song feel more inclusive and welcoming.

Ed Sheeran helped write this one, so his fans showed up too. The positive message hit different since we were all still dealing with pandemic life. It couldn’t beat Butter’s speed, but watching BTS drop two massive hits back to back felt unreal. 

The song became a stadium anthem during their 2022 concerts.

9. Life Goes On

Song NameLife Goes On
ArtistBTS
Release DateNovember 20, 2020
GenreAlternative R&B
Previous Record Holder It BeatN/A

Life Goes On was quieter and more emotional. The MV showed the members in cozy settings, almost like watching friends hang out during quarantine. Most of the song was in Korean.

This wasn’t about hype or big production. BTS talked about getting through hard times, which everyone related to in 2020. It became the first mostly Korean song to debut at number one on Billboard Hot 100. 

That moment felt huge for K-pop as a whole, not just BTS.

10. Kill This Love

Song NameKill This Love
ArtistBLACKPINK
Release DateApril 5, 2019
GenreEDM/Trap
Previous Record Holder It BeatIdol (BTS)

Kill This Love opened with explosions and a tank getting destroyed. The visuals were movie-level, with the members in military-inspired outfits looking ready for battle.

This dropped during Coachella weekend when BLACKPINK became the first K-pop girl group to perform there. The timing was perfect. 

Everyone who watched Coachella wanted to see the MV. That “ddu-du ddu-du” callback made long-time BLINKs scream. The song structure broke normal pop rules with sudden tempo changes that somehow worked.

How Fastest K-Pop Songs to Reach 100M Views Is Calculated

Here are the methods we used to compile this list to make sure the numbers are accurate and fair:

  • YouTube’s official view counter is the only source that matters. Real-time tracking websites watch this counter every second during comeback periods.
  • MV upload timestamps show exactly when the video went live. Most groups drop at midnight KST or schedule global premieres so fans worldwide can watch together.
  • The exact moment when the counter hits 100,000,000 gets screenshot by multiple people. Fan accounts race to post proof first. It’s become a whole event in itself.
  • Time difference calculations use hours and minutes to determine the final ranking. Even 30 minutes can change positions on the leaderboard, so accuracy really matters.

These methods became standard after arguments in 2019 about whose favorite group actually won. Now everyone uses YouTube’s official data, so there’s no debate. The numbers speak for themselves.

Conclusion: BTS’s “Butter” Remains the Fastest K-Pop Song to Reach 100M Views in 21 Hours

Butter still holds the top spot in January 2026. That 21-hour record shows what BTS and ARMY can do when they coordinate across continents. BLACKPINK matched that energy comeback after comeback, holding four spots in the top ten. 

Lisa’s solo success at number seven shows individual members can compete with full groups. YouTube’s stricter algorithms in 2025 make these records from 2019-2021 even more impressive. 

Groups like BABYMONSTER are coming for these spots, but right now, Butter is still unbeaten.

More Related Reads:

FAQs

Which is the fastest K-pop song to reach 100 million views?

BTS’s “Butter” reached 100 million YouTube views in about 21 hours after dropping in May 2021, making it the fastest ever.

What is the fastest song to reach 100m streams?

BTS’s “Butter” also holds streaming records, though exact times differ between Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube depending on release schedules and regions.

Who is the fastest K-pop group to enter the Billboard Hot 100?

BTS entered the Billboard Hot 100 fastest with songs debuting immediately, including “Dynamite,” which went straight to number one in August 2020.

What is the fastest album to have all songs reach 100 million streams?

BTS albums consistently hit this goal fastest, with their greatest hits and anthology albums pushing all tracks past 100 million together.

Which is the fastest song to 500 million streams?

BTS’s “Dynamite” reached 500 million Spotify streams faster than any K-pop song, helped by Western radio play and global playlists.

About the Author

A lifelong music enthusiast turned stan, Eram started KpopBeen to create a space where the global fandom can stay updated on comebacks, chart rankings, fandom buzz, and everything happening in the K-Pop world. Eram combines deep love for K-Pop with a passion for storytelling that connects fans across the globe. Through KpopBeen, her goal is simple: to celebrate idols, amplify fandom voices, and bring the energy of K-Pop to every fan’s screen. When not writing or curating the latest updates, you’ll find Eram streaming new releases or reliving legendary stages that made K-Pop the global movement it is today.

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