Taylor Swift’s Evermore has been performing spectacularly lately, as interest in the title seems to spike every autumn. The years-old set has always been a favorite among the superstar’s massive fan base, and its showing on the Billboard charts is still impressive.
After several frames of success on the U.S.-based rankings, this latest period has turned out to be especially important for the project. As millions continue to buy and stream Evermore, they keep it on several of the most important Billboard charts, including what is often considered the most competitive for albums.
Evermore celebrates hitting 200 weeks on the Billboard 200 as of this frame. The full-length is down slightly—fewer than 10 spaces—but it’s still living inside the upper half of the ranking. This time around, the set lands at No. 94.
Luminate reports that in the past tracking period, Evermore moved another 12,000 equivalent units. That sum includes nearly 2,900 actual sales—a huge sum for a title that’s already sold so well for so long. Both of those numbers are down a bit from last week, but they’re still strong enough to keep the title going.
Evermore is Swift’s seventh album to spend 200 weeks on the Billboard 200. She’s already seen all of the following bestsellers hit that number: 1989, Reputation, her self-titled, Lover, Fearless, and Folklore.
That latter effort was her most recent addition to the 200-week club, before Evermore joined in on the fun. That companion project to Evermore—they were released just months apart in the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic—is now up to 220 turns on the Billboard 200.
It’s not easy to predict which of Swift’s albums will reach 200 frames on that tally next. Speak Now and Red are closest to that mark, but those full-lengths have largely fallen out of favor. The Grammy winner re-recorded and re-released both of them, and fans are focused on the Taylor’s Versions of the titles, which haven’t yet reached the milestone.
Fearless (Taylor’s Version) is only a few months away from 200 weeks, but it’s not present on the Billboard 200 at the moment, so it might not make it to that number for a while. In a little less than a year, Red (Taylor’s Version) will join Evermore, and it may be her next title to do so.