BLACKPINK’s 'JUMP' hits 600M
- BLACKPINK’s “JUMP” has effectively reached the 600 million-stream mark on Spotify in early May 2026, less than 10 months after its July 11, 2025 release. (mystreamcount.com) - The clearest live tracker had the song at 598.4 million streams on May 7, still adding about 891,876 daily — enough to push past 600 million days later. (kworb.net) - That keeps “JUMP” in BLACKPINK’s top streaming tier and extends the comeback’s chart story after No. 1 debuts on Spotify global and Billboard global charts. (billboard.com)
BLACKPINK’s “JUMP” hitting 600 million Spotify streams matters because it shows this wasn’t just a comeback spike. The song came out on July 11, 2025, exploded immediately, and then kept moving at a pace most releases can’t hold for long. By May 7, 2026, one of the most widely used Spotify trackers had it at 598.4 million streams, with nearly 892,000 streams still coming in daily — which means the 600 million line was basically days away, and by now very likely crossed. (mystreamcount.com) (kworb.net) ### Why is 600 million a big deal? Because this is the point where a song stops looking like a hot release and starts looking like a catalog monster. Lots of tracks debut huge. Fewer keep enough daily volume to stack hundreds of millions in under a year. “JUMP” did that while sitting alongside BLACKPINK’s older giants like “How You Like That,” “Kill This Love,” and “Pink Venom” in the group’s streaming hierarchy. (billboard.com) ### How fast did “JUMP” get there? The release date matters here — July 11, 2025. If the song cleared 600 million around May 9, 2026, that puts it at roughly 302 days. Even before that, the pace was obvious. “JUMP” had already crossed 300 million in about 80 days, which was treated as a record pace for a BLACKPINK song in that lane. (mystreamcount.com) Basically, the back half of the run never really collapsed. ### Was the launch really that strong? Yes — and the launch explains the base this song built from. “JUMP” hit No. 1 on Spotify’s Daily Top Songs Global chart within days of release, giving BLACKPINK their third career No. 1 there. It also debuted at No. 1 on both the Billboard Global 200 and Billboard Global Excl. (kworb.net) U.S. charts, which is the kind of cross-platform opening that tells you the audience is broad, not just loud. ### Why does that staying power matter more? Because streaming power is really two different things. One is fandom intensity on release week. The other is repeat listening from casual listeners, playlist placement, and international carry. “JUMP” looks like it had both. A song still pulling close to 900,000 daily streams near the 600 million mark is not coasting on first-week hype. (mystreamcount.com) It’s still functioning like a global hit. ### Where does this sit in BLACKPINK’s catalog? It already sits near the top of the group’s all-time Spotify list. On the May 7 Kworb snapshot, “JUMP” was at 598.4 million streams, ahead of “Pretty Savage” and behind only BLACKPINK’s biggest long-tail staples like “How You Like That,” “Kill This Love,” “Pink Venom,” “Shut Down,” and a few others. (en.yna.co.kr) That is a very crowded top shelf — and “JUMP” got there fast. ### Why does this matter beyond bragging rights? Because streaming scale feeds everything else. It strengthens tour demand, keeps the song visible in algorithmic discovery, and gives BLACKPINK more proof that long gaps between group releases don’t erase audience appetite. The catch is that fan accounts often rush milestone claims before the number is fully visible on public trackers. (kworb.net) But in this case, the gap between 598.4 million on May 7 and 600 million is tiny enough that the claim is credible now. ### Bottom line “JUMP” looks like a real 600 million-stream hit, not a social-media rounding trick. More importantly, it shows BLACKPINK can still turn a comeback single into a durable global streaming event months after release. (kworb.net)