BTS returned with ARIRANG and immediately reminded everyone how big their ceiling still is. The album pulled in over 110 million streams on Spotify in its first 24 hours, setting a new record for the biggest K-pop album debut on the platform and the largest single-day total for any album released this year. Every track from the 14-song project landed on the Spotify Global Top 50, with “SWIM” debuting at No. 1 and “Body to Body” right behind it, turning the release into a full-chart takeover rather than just a strong opening. For a deeper look at the streaming mechanics behind that debut, see BTS’ ‘Arirang’ Sets New Spotify Records On Release Day.
The sales side moved just as aggressively. According to Hanteo, ARIRANG sold 3.98 million copies on day one, which is notable not just for the number itself but for how quickly it happened. That figure surpasses the group’s previous record set by Map of the Soul: 7, but does it in a single day instead of over a full week, showing how concentrated demand has become around the comeback.
Across platforms, the pattern held. Both Apple Music and Amazon Music reported record-breaking first-day performancefor a K-pop release, reinforcing that this wasn’t tied to one ecosystem. It was a coordinated global surge.
Even with that kind of momentum, the response on the market side told a different story. HYBE saw its stock drop 15%following the comeback weekend, hitting a three-month low. Some of that reaction was tied to the Seoul launch concert, where attendance came in below early projections, though the numbers varied depending on the source and how the crowd was measured. At the same time, the broader Korean market was already under pressure, with geopolitical tensions pushing the KOSPI index down and other entertainment companies falling alongside HYBE.
That contrast is where things get interesting.
On the consumption side, BTS is still operating at a level where they can dominate every major platform at once. On the business side, expectations are now so high that even a slightly underwhelming signal — whether it’s concert turnout or anything tied to scale — can move the market. RM spoke directly to that kind of weight in his interview ahead of the comeback, framing leadership as the challenge of carrying responsibility while still remaining part of the collective.