Fresh off their sold-out North American tour, LE SSERAFIM returned with a bold move: a new single titled SPAGHETTI, featuring BTS’s J-Hope. The track marked a clear milestone for the group’s commercial trajectory. According to Billboard, SPAGHETTI entered the Billboard Hot 100 at No. 50 — their third entry and their highest charting so far, surpassing CRAZY, which peaked at No. 76 and remained for two weeks.
On the global front, they also hit new peaks: debuting at No. 6 on the Billboard Global 200 and No. 3 on the Global Excl. U.S. chart.
In the UK, SPAGHETTI debuted at No. 46 on the Official Singles Chart — a first-time Top 50 entry for them in the UK market.
Streaming metrics added further weight: SPAGHETTI reached No. 19 on Spotify’s global daily chart with 2.52 million streams on one day.
For the week of October 24-30, it logged around 16.84 million streams — reported as the largest first-week stream debut of 2025 by a 4th-generation K-pop group.
The move also signalled a change in their creative positioning: the single comes from their first single-album SPAGHETTI, and media coverage suggests the group took a stronger role in its concept and design.
Added Note:
- The track was officially released October 24, 2025, under Source Music / Geffen with Korean and English versions.
- According to reports, the music video for SPAGHETTI features playful food-metaphor visuals, reflecting the lyric “Stuck between your teeth, that’s spaghetti.”
LE SSERAFIM’s SPAGHETTI closes a chapter of growth and opens a new one of ambition. It is their strongest commercial showing to date, suggesting that the group has moved past the “rookie breakout” phase and entered a stage of broader global relevance. The collaboration with J-Hope elevated their reach; the streaming and chart data confirmed their resonance beyond domestic boundaries. Most importantly, the fact that the concept of this album came from LE SSERAFIM, from Yunjin to be exact, signals that they have greater creative agency in this release hints at evolution not just in numbers, but in identity.
If they sustain this momentum, LE SSERAFIM could become a blueprint for 4th gen girl groups aiming for global impact on their own terms. In the competitive world of K-pop, where virality often eclipses consistency, SPAGHETTI stands as a statement: they’re here not just to debut, but to endure.