Queen Tops U.K. All-Time Best-Selling Albums
by Best Classic Bands Staff
Queen has been crowned #1 in the U.K.
In 2016, we shared the news that Paul McCartney was declared the top album artist of all time in the U.K. Macca’s landmark achievement was announced exactly 60 years to the day after Britain’s Official Charts Company published its first LP popularity chart. The numbers were based on his releases as a member of The Beatles (15 chart-toppers), plus two with Wings, five as a solo artist and one with his late first wife, Linda McCartney.
So the logical follow-up question is: What albums are the all-time best-sellers in the U.K.? The answers will surprise and, no, Michael Jackson’s Thriller, despite being the world’s far-and-away top-seller, is not #1.
The list of artists (and soundtracks) that are conspicuous in their absence is as fascinating as those that made it. Those MIA include such heavyweights as Led Zeppelin, Eagles, the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack, AC/DC (whose Back in Black is the world’s #2 best-seller), Celine Dion, Mariah Carey, Bruce Springsteen, The Bodyguard soundtrack (#4 worldwide), Metallica, Nirvana, Santana and Guns N’ Roses, each of whom has LPs with worldwide sales reported to be north of 30 million copies.
Drumroll, please, here are some of the all-time top-selling classic rock albums in the U.K…
28) Alanis Morissette – Jagged Little Pill
28) U2 – The Joshua Tree
21) The Verve – Urban Hymns
21) Meat Loaf – Bat Out of Hell
21) Simon and Garfunkel – Bridge Over Troubled Water
14) Adele – 25
14) The Beatles – 1
14) Queen – Greatest Hits II
8) Amy Winehouse – Back to Black
8) Dire Straits – Brothers in Arms
8) Bob Marley & the Wailers – Legend
8) Michael Jackson – Thriller
7) Pink Floyd – The Dark Side of the Moon
6) Fleetwood Mac – Rumours
3) Adele – 21
3) Oasis – What’s the Story Morning Glory
3) The Beatles – Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
2) Abba – Gold: Greatest Hits
1) Queen – Greatest Hits
According to the Official Albums Chart Company, as of November 2025, the top-selling hits album from Queen has sold over 7.5 million copies in the U.K. The total is a combination of physical sales, downloads and streams. Brian May and Roger Taylor offered their thanks…
Abba’s hits collection is at 6.6 million. Sgt. Pepper, at over 5.4 million, is thus the highest ranked studio album.
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10 Comments so far
Jump into a conversationThose hits collections are still “studio albums” by strict definition.
The Official Charts Company doesn’t agree with you, Guy, in how studio albums are defined. Official Charts chief executive Martin Talbot said: “In celebration of 60 years of the UK’s Official Album Chart, it is fantastic that we can crown Queen as the kings of the Anniversary Top 60. With seven albums by British acts in the all-time Top 10, and Adele’s 21 now challenging The Beatles’ Sgt Pepper to be the biggest selling studio album of all time.”
Yeah, but it’s studio tracks. Well, whatever. Semantics.
Greatest hits albums are just cherry picking ! When me & my friends sat crossed legged around a little record player in 1967 listening to Sgt Pepper for the first time , we felt like we’d gone to another world !
I’m guessing the article was made by an American? There’s nothing surprising about Queen outselling Led Zeppelin, they did it pretty much everywhere, except the US and Canada.
Also, nobody cares about the Eagles outside of US.
Thanks for taking the time, Danny. The numbers for Queen’s various hits collections are certainly impressive. In the UK, it certainly appears that Led Zeppelin’s studio efforts were consistently better sellers. Your claim about the Eagles is simply not true. The crowds at their sold-out arena tours worldwide and the roughly 16 million people who own the Hotel California album say “hello.”
yes Queen is better/was better…and the eagles only had a few hits…half english/half american..cheers!
I definitely exaggerated about the Eagles, but there are certain bands that are FAR more popular in North America than Europe.
Led Zeppelin probably leads that list, considering they sold 68% of their albums in North America, mostly US. The Eagles are up there too (2/3 sold in the US alone). More examples are Journey, Van Halen, Rush, Foreigner and Bruce Springsteen.
Again, I’m not saying they’re not popular in Europe, just MUCH more popular across the ocean.
Sorry but Michael Jackson on a classic rock list? The list is junk.
I kind of see where Danny is coming from, perhaps not a statical perspective, but from a cultural perspective.
Slade sold over 50 Million albums, was frenetically-popular in the U.K. And Europe during their heyday, yet relatively unknown in the States, until Quiet Riot (blasphemously) covered their hits in the early 80s.
I had the good fortune to attend one of their few U.S. Tours, in 1974, and, putting it mildly, they blew the roof off the auditorium – you could literally feel the floor and seats vibrating from the foot-stomping.
One of the rockin’ best shows I have ever attended, and I have attended too many to count, in my life’s musical journey.
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