Rihanna has made music history again — and she did it without releasing a single note of new material. The Recording Industry Association of America has confirmed that the Barbadian artist has surpassed 200.5 million certified single units, making her the first woman in history to cross the 200 million mark. She now sits third on the all-time digital singles list, behind Drake at 277.5 million and Morgan Wallen at 215 million.
What makes the milestone particularly striking is the context around it. Rihanna has not released a full album since Anti in January 2016. In the decade since, she has not toured, has released only a handful of individual tracks, and has largely redirected her public energy toward her Fenty Beauty and Savage X Fenty businesses. Yet her catalogue has continued to grow its streaming footprint as though she never left.
How the numbers work
Under the RIAA certification framework, one unit equals either a single permanent digital download or 150 on-demand streams. It is a system designed for the streaming era, which partly explains why artists with deep, consistently played back catalogues accumulate certifications at a pace that would have been impossible under the old physical sales model.
For Rihanna, that system has worked in her favour in a significant way. Songs like Umbrella, We Found Love, Only Girl (In the World) and Don’t Stop the Music have never really left the public consciousness — they circulate continuously across clubs, gym playlists, weddings, TikTok edits and radio. Each stream counts. Over a decade, that adds up.
Anti turns a decade old and keeps going
The milestone arrives on the back of another record. In December, Anti crossed 500 weeks on the Billboard 200 — the first time a Black woman had achieved that milestone in the chart’s history. Rihanna’s response at the time was characteristically unfiltered.
The album, which produced Work, Needed Me and Love On The Brain, has become one of the most quietly enduring records of its era — a slow burn that grew rather than faded.
As for album nine, Rihanna has been candid about why it has taken so long. Speaking to Harper’s Bazaar, she said the absence of a clear genre in the current landscape has made it difficult to find something that genuinely reflects where she is. “Every time, I was just like, no, it’s not me. It’s not matching my growth. It’s not matching my evolution. I can’t stand by this,” she said.
For now, the record stands. And given the trajectory of her streaming numbers, it may not be the last one.
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