Billboard Year-end Hot 100 Singles Of 1997 Apr 2026
| Rank | Song | Artist | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | "Candle in the Wind 1997" | Elton John | | 2 | "Foolish Games" / "You Were Meant for Me" | Jewel | | 3 | "I'll Be Missing You" | Puff Daddy & Faith Evans ft. 112 | | 4 | "Un-Break My Heart" | Toni Braxton | | 5 | "Can't Nobody Hold Me Down" | Puff Daddy ft. Mase | | 6 | "I Believe I Can Fly" | R. Kelly | | 7 | "Don't Let Go (Love)" | En Vogue | | 8 | "Return of the Mack" | Mark Morrison | | 9 | "How Do I Live" | LeAnn Rimes | | 10 | "Wannabe" | Spice Girls |
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billboard-year-end-hot-100-1997
And that next big thing was already waiting in the wings.
The power ballad of the year. Diane Warren penned this monster, and Toni Braxton’s sultry, aching vocals made it an adult contemporary staple. If you were slow-dancing at a middle school dance in 1997, this was the song. billboard year-end hot 100 singles of 1997
(Note: The rest of the top 20 includes Hanson's "MMMbop" at #12, The Cardigans' "Lovefool" at #15, and Chumbawamba's "Tubthumping" at #18.) 1. Elton John – “Candle in the Wind 1997” You can’t talk about 1997 without addressing the elephant in the room: the death of Princess Diana. Elton John’s reworked tribute to Marilyn Monroe became the best-selling single in Billboard history (until streaming changed the math). It was inescapable, somber, and utterly dominant. It spent 14 weeks at #1.
Before NSYNC and Britney took over, 1997 was a glorious mess of Puff Daddy, Spice Girls, Hanson, and the Macarena. Revisit the complete top 10 and the biggest trends of the year. If you were alive in 1997, you remember the vibe. It was the bridge between the grungy, cynical ’90s and the glossy, TRL-driven boy band era about to explode. It was the year of Titanic , beanie babies, and the first glimpse of a DVD. | Rank | Song | Artist | |
But the music? The Billboard Year-End Hot 100 of 1997 is a chaotic, glorious time capsule. It was a year where hip-hop met stadium rock (thanks to Puff Daddy), a one-hit-wonder dance craze refused to die, and a trio of blonde siblings taught the world that “MMMbop” was an actual word.