Official Charts 70th Anniversary: The Official Top 10 best-selling singles from the 2000s

It was the start of a new millennium, and a bold new age for pop music.
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As the Official Charts Company celebrates the 70th anniversary of the UK's only Official Singles Chart, we've opened the vaults and crunched the numbers to reveal the Top 10 biggest singles of each successive decade following the birth of the Official Singles Chart in 1952.

We're going to be taking a look at the defining hits of the 1960s, 70s, 80s, 90s, 00s and 10s. After revealing the biggest-sellers from the 90s yesterday, today we're zoning in on a brand-new millennium - the 2000s!

When we entered a new millennium, so did pop music. And my, how did it shift and change through this decade! Not only did we see the rise of reality TV as the most engaging way for emerging artists to enjoy chart success, to the turn of the decade where an explosion of 80s-influenced dance-pop birthed superstars like Lady Gaga, Rihanna and Katy Perry; who would go on to become the faces of this new movement of pop well into the 2010s.

Disclaimer: This is a list of the best-selling singles released from 2000-2009, compiled from Official Charts Company data representing pure, physical sales from 2000 - 2022.

10. Poker Face
Artist: Lady Gaga
Released: 2009
Official Singles Chart peak: Number 1
Total UK sales: 1.20 million

If Just Dance was the effervescent start to the party, then sister single Poker Face was the soundtrack to the after-party that continued well into the night.

Sexy, sensual and charged by a ferocious, precocious energy, the Eurodance anthem celebrates Lady Gaga's sexuality, and marked her true emergence as an enigmatic new idol for pop fans to obsess over.

9. Can't Get You Out Of My Head
Artist: Kylie Minogue
Released: 2001
Official Singles Chart peak: Number 1
Total UK sales: 1.21 million

The story of how Can't Get You Out Of My Head made its way to Kylie is almost as interesting as the song itself; written originally for S Club 7 and rejected by Sophie Ellis-Bextor, the song made its way to Kylie as she was on a massive come-up following her successful pivot back into commercial pop with 2000's Light Years. 

Hypnotic, engrossing and still sounding just a little bit like the future, this bold mid-career swing would prove once and for all that no-one embodies the image of a pop star quite like Kylie when she's firing on all cylinders. 

8. Chasing Cars
Artist: Snow Patrol
Released: 2006
Official Singles Chart peak: Number 6
Total UK sales: 1.21 million

Chasing Cars holds the distinction of being the lowest-peaking song of any across our decades best-sellers lists, managing a peak of Number 6 on the Official Singles Chart.

It may have never climbed higher, but it became the defining hit of Snow Patrol's career, and even just hearing a snippet of the track now is guarenteed to take you back to the mid-00s. 

7. Hallelujah 
Artist: Alexandra Burke
Released: 2008
Official Singles Chart peak: Number 1
Total UK sales: 1.33 million

Given how deftly engaging Alexandra Burke was as a pop star during her time on the X Factor - perhaps the only contestant to ever master the art of singing and dancing at the same time quite so well - it's still surprising that this morose cover of a Leonard Cohen classic (covered famously by Jeff Buckley) was her winner's single. 

But Alexandra had her moment, and she took it. Her take on Hallelujah feels rich in meaning and emotion; almost like a hymn. Debuting at Number 1 in the UK, it would give Alex the best possible start to her career, and she would make good on her pop star promise with sterling solo single proper Bad Boys the next year.

6. Unchained Melody
Artist: Gareth Gates
Released: 2002
Official Singles Chart peak: Number 1
Total UK sales: 1.35 million

Eagle-eyed viewers will notice this is the second appearence by Unchained Melody here - given it was also a best-selling hit of the 90s by duo Robson & Jerome

Here it was re-twizzled for Pop Idol winner up Gareth Gates, where it would have been his winner's single. He may not have scooped the crown, but he did release Unchained Melody as his debut single - it would be the first of four UK chart-toppers for the hair gel afficionado. 

5. (Is This The Way To) Amarillo
Artist: Tony Christie feat. Peter Kay
Released: 2005
Official Singles Chart peak: Number 1
Total UK sales: 1.37 million

The UK really, truly loves a charity single. For Children In Need 2005 comedian Peter Kay joined forces with crooner Tony Christie for a re-record of his most famous single.

(Is This The Way To) Amarillo came complete with a star-studded music video, and the song even managed to out-peak its original 1971 result of Number 18 and becoming Christie's first UK chart-topper, at the age of 61.

4. Sex on Fire
Artist: Kings of Leon
Released: 2008
Official Singles Chart peak: Number 1
Total UK sales: 1.41 million

Nashville rockband Kings of Leon seemed to explode out of nowhere in the late 00s with two singles that seemed to be everywhere; Sex on Fire and Use Somebody.

Written about the band frontman Caleb's girlfriend (and now wife), model Lily Aldridge, alternate titles for the stadium rock classic included Set Us On Fire and...uh...Socks On Fire. Nice.

3. It Wasn't Me
Artist: Shaggy feat. RikRok
Released: 2001
Official Singles Chart peak: Number 1
Total UK sales: 1.45 million

Although the set-up of It Wasn't Me may be morally dubious (with Shaggy acting as advisor on telling his friend how to deny that he cheated on his girlfriend, which he definitely did), although the song does admit that Shaggy's plea to deny, deny, deny makes no sense at all.

Apparently It Wasn't Me was never originally intended to be released as a single, but its success speaks for itself - becoming the third of Shaggy's four (!) UK Number 1 singles.

2. I Gotta Feeling
Artist: Black Eyed Peas
Released: 2009
Official Singles Chart peak: Number 1
Total UK sales: 1.50 million

Black Eyed Peas had been around for a while by 2009, but their output around this time with seminal album The E.N.D turned them from a pop adjacent hip-hop quarter to a full-blown supergroup. 

With lead single Boom Boom Pow given a harder edge, it was the David Guetta-produced I Gotta Feeling that gave the Pea's the defining hit of their career, and what quickly became a soundtrack to every night out, whether you liked it or not.

1. Anything Is Possible/Evergreen
Artist: Will Young
Released: 2002
Official Singles Chart peak: Number 1
Total UK sales: 1.80 million

It's hard to overstate the change that occurred at the start of the 21st century with the arrival of talent shows like Popstars and Pop Idol. While Popstars' big success, Hear'say, had fractured quite quickly despite massive success, British reality TV found its first true superstar in Pop Idol's inaugural winner, Will Young.

A double A-side comprised of original cut Anything Is Possible and Will's winners single Evergreen (a cover of a Westlife album track) shot straight in at Number 1 on the Official Singles Chart, staying a the top for three consecutive weeks. It was the biggest-selling single of the 21st century, until it was overtaken by Pharrell's Happy in 2015.
 

The Official Top 10 best-selling singles from the 2000s

POS TITLE ARTIST PEAK YEAR
1 ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE/EVERGREEN WILL YOUNG 1 2002
2 I GOTTA FEELING BLACK EYED PEAS 1 2009
3 IT WASN'T ME SHAGGY FT RIKROK 2001
4 SEX ON FIRE KINGS OF LEON 1 2008
5 (IS THIS THE WAY TO) AMARILLO TONY CHRISTIE FT PETER KAY 1 2005
6 UNCHAINED MELODY GARETH GATES 1 2002
7 HALLELUJAH ALEXANDRA BURKE 1 2008
8 CHASSING CARS SNOW PATROL 6 2006
9 CAN'T GET YOI OUT OF MY HEAD KYLIE MINOGUE 1 2001
10 POKER FACE LADY GAGA 1 2009

©2022 Official Charts Company. All rights reserved.

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Mm

0

In your Britney biggest 10 selling singles, you mentioned Toxic sold 1.3 M, which puts it above Snow Patrol’s #8.

Why is it absent here?

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David Eve

0

Why doesn't this total include downloads which became the biggest way to consume music during this period? You added streams for the 10s (but again not downloads)

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Saint Perth

2

No Britney....so sad