Album
Peso Pluma & Tito Double P - DINASTÍA
DINASTÍA right now: current position, movement, and related listens.
Release Overview
On today's US album ranking, DINASTÍA sits at #19. For Peso Pluma & Tito Double P, this is the strongest current position.
Released on December 25, 2025, the track sits in Latin. A playable preview is available on Apple Music. At 54 days old and still charting, it is holding steady replay demand.
Across 6 daily snapshots, the high is #9, the low is #19, and the average sits at #14.3. The latest move is down 1 place, with a net move of down 10 since the first recorded point. The rank spread so far is 10.
For now, this is the only Peso Pluma & Tito Double P title in this chart snapshot. Within today's Latin group (11 tracked releases), this title is holding a mid-pack slot.
A #19 rank looks simple on the surface, but what listeners usually want is the shape behind that number. Is it still climbing, leveling out, or cooling off after a peak? With 6 tracked days in this run, the timeline is still young, but it already gives a clean baseline for how this track is behaving.
Peso Pluma & Tito Double P has 1 active entry in the same chart window, and DINASTÍA is setting the pace for that cluster. That artist-level view matters because fans rarely stop at one song; they usually move to the next closest title from the same cycle.
At 54 days old, this track is far enough from launch week to judge staying power. New releases can spike on curiosity. Older songs that remain visible usually stay there because listeners keep replaying them, playlists keep supporting them, or the catalog keeps pulling people back.
That is why genre framing is useful here. In a Latin set with 11 tracked releases, movement can be read against comparable songs rather than unrelated chart traffic. It keeps expectations realistic and makes the related links feel relevant instead of random.
The movement note is intentionally plain language. Flat means the audience is holding. Up means momentum is building. Down does not make the track irrelevant; it shows where demand is settling after a high point. Either way, the page stays useful because it describes what is happening now, not what we hope happens next.
If you are here to decide what to queue after this, the shortest path is usually the best one: stay inside this artist lane first, then step into the nearest genre neighbors. That keeps the listening session coherent and matches how people actually move through chart pages when they are in discovery mode.
If DINASTÍA is your entry point, the cleanest next move is to stay in Peso Pluma & Tito Double P's current lane: jump next to the closest tracks in the same run. Those steps keep the mood intact while still showing range inside the same chart cycle.
That sequence also explains why this run feels sticky right now: one clear leader, multiple nearby titles, and enough replay behavior to keep the catalog active well past release week. If the next snapshots stay flat near the top, this starts looking less like a moment and more like a sustained phase.