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Earworms: Songs You Can’t Get Out of Your Head

Earworm songs are the sticky little tunes that move into your brain, unpack a suitcase, and refuse to leave. Sometimes it is a chorus. Sometimes it is a chant, a riff, a nonsense syllable, a commercial jingle, a dance hook, a children’s song, or one line that repeats until your brain waves a tiny white flag.

The best earworms are not always the “best” songs in the traditional sense. They are the songs that loop. They are simple enough to remember, strange enough to stand out, and catchy enough to ambush you while you are trying to buy eggs. That is the power of Baby Shark, Macarena, MMMBop, Barbie Girl, Can’t Get You Out of My Head, and It’s a Small World.

This updated list includes classic earworms, novelty songs, children’s tunes, TV themes, viral internet songs, dance crazes, pop hooks, oldies, rock chants, TikTok-era earworms, and a few songs that probably owe us rent for the space they take up in our heads.

Consider yourself warned: reading this page may cause several songs to begin playing internally at once. That is not a bug. That is the list doing its job.

Earworms: Songs You Can’t Get Out of Your Head

Best Earworm Songs

The strongest earworm songs usually have a sticky chorus, a simple melodic pattern, a chant, a dance, a funny phrase, or a title that repeats until resistance becomes pointless. These are the songs most likely to reappear later when you least expect them.

  • It’s a Small World – Disney
  • Baby Shark – Pinkfong
  • Can’t Get You Out of My Head – Kylie Minogue
  • Bad Romance – Lady Gaga
  • Call Me Maybe – Carly Rae Jepsen
  • Macarena – Los del Río
  • MMMBop – Hanson
  • Barbie Girl – Aqua
  • Gangnam Style – PSY
  • Espresso – Sabrina Carpenter

Top 100 Earworm Songs

  1. It’s a Small World – Disney
  2. Baby Shark – Pinkfong
  3. Can’t Get You Out of My Head – Kylie Minogue
  4. Bad Romance – Lady Gaga
  5. Call Me Maybe – Carly Rae Jepsen
  6. Macarena – Los del Río
  7. MMMBop – Hanson
  8. Barbie Girl – Aqua
  9. Gangnam Style – PSY
  10. Espresso – Sabrina Carpenter
  11. APT. – ROSÉ and Bruno Mars
  12. HOT TO GO! – Chappell Roan
  13. Apple – Charli xcx
  14. Dance Monkey – Tones and I
  15. Old Town Road – Lil Nas X featuring Billy Ray Cyrus
  16. Bad Guy – Billie Eilish
  17. As It Was – Harry Styles
  18. Blinding Lights – The Weeknd
  19. Flowers – Miley Cyrus
  20. Anti-Hero – Taylor Swift
  21. Shake It Off – Taylor Swift
  22. Good Luck, Babe! – Chappell Roan
  23. Levitating – Dua Lipa
  24. Unholy – Sam Smith and Kim Petras
  25. abcdefu – GAYLE
  26. Despacito – Luis Fonsi featuring Daddy Yankee
  27. Let It Go – Idina Menzel
  28. The Fox (What Does the Fox Say?) – Ylvis
  29. Dragostea Din Tei – O-Zone
  30. Blue (Da Ba Dee) – Eiffel 65
  31. Who Let the Dogs Out? – Baha Men
  32. Friday – Rebecca Black
  33. Never Gonna Give You Up – Rick Astley
  34. Party in the U.S.A. – Miley Cyrus
  35. Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It) – Beyoncé
  36. Poker Face – Lady Gaga
  37. Umbrella – Rihanna featuring Jay-Z
  38. Hollaback Girl – Gwen Stefani
  39. Fergalicious – Fergie
  40. My Humps – The Black Eyed Peas
  41. Mickey – Toni Basil
  42. Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go – Wham!
  43. Wannabe – Spice Girls
  44. What Is Love – Haddaway
  45. Come On Eileen – Dexys Midnight Runners
  46. Tubthumping – Chumbawamba
  47. The Sign – Ace of Base
  48. Sweet Caroline – Neil Diamond
  49. All Star – Smash Mouth
  50. We Will Rock You – Queen
  51. Yellow Submarine – The Beatles
  52. I Got You Babe – Sonny & Cher
  53. 867-5309/Jenny – Tommy Tutone
  54. Funkytown – Lipps Inc.
  55. The Lion Sleeps Tonight – The Tokens
  56. Mah Nà Mah Nà – The Muppets
  57. Surfin’ Bird – The Trashmen
  58. The Final Countdown – Europe
  59. Entrance of the Gladiators – Julius Fučík
  60. Cotton Eye Joe – Rednex
  61. DuckTales Theme – Disney Television Animation
  62. Baby Elephant Walk – Henry Mancini
  63. The Hustle – Van McCoy and the Soul City Symphony
  64. Mambo No. 5 – Lou Bega
  65. Da Da Da – Trio
  66. Lollipop – The Chordettes
  67. Tarzan Boy – Baltimora
  68. Got My Mind Set on You – George Harrison
  69. I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles) – The Proclaimers
  70. It Wasn’t Me – Shaggy featuring Rikrok
  71. Just a Friend – Biz Markie
  72. Royals – Lorde
  73. Dark Horse – Katy Perry featuring Juicy J
  74. Cantaloop (Flip Fantasia) – Us3
  75. The Safety Dance – Men Without Hats
  76. Hamster Dance – Hampton the Hamster
  77. Whoomp! (There It Is) – Tag Team
  78. Semi-Charmed Life – Third Eye Blind
  79. Achy Breaky Heart – Billy Ray Cyrus
  80. Insane in the Brain – Cypress Hill
  81. Splish Splash – Bobby Darin
  82. Get Lucky – Daft Punk featuring Pharrell Williams
  83. Stacy’s Mom – Fountains of Wayne
  84. Don’t Worry, Be Happy – Bobby McFerrin
  85. Karma Chameleon – Culture Club
  86. Eye of the Tiger – Survivor
  87. Hakuna Matata – Nathan Lane, Ernie Sabella, Jason Weaver and Joseph Williams
  88. The Time Warp – The Rocky Horror Picture Show Cast
  89. Lip Gloss – Lil Mama
  90. You Spin Me Round (Like a Record) – Dead or Alive
  91. One Week – Barenaked Ladies
  92. Takin’ Care of Business – Bachman-Turner Overdrive
  93. Summertime, Summertime – The Jamies
  94. Scotty Doesn’t Know – Lustra
  95. It’s Tricky – Run-D.M.C.
  96. Video Killed the Radio Star – The Buggles
  97. Symphony No. 5 – Ludwig van Beethoven
  98. Material Girl – Madonna
  99. Paper Planes – M.I.A.
  100. The Chicken Dance – Werner Thomas / Traditional party dance

Modern Earworms from Streaming, TikTok and Viral Pop

Modern earworms travel fast because a hook no longer needs only radio to take over. It can spread through TikTok dances, memes, short videos, streaming playlists, sports clips, movie trailers, and the deeply dangerous sentence, “Have you heard this yet?”

  • Espresso – Sabrina Carpenter
  • APT. – ROSÉ and Bruno Mars
  • HOT TO GO! – Chappell Roan
  • Apple – Charli xcx
  • Dance Monkey – Tones and I
  • Old Town Road – Lil Nas X featuring Billy Ray Cyrus
  • Bad Guy – Billie Eilish
  • As It Was – Harry Styles
  • Blinding Lights – The Weeknd
  • Good Luck, Babe! – Chappell Roan

Classic Earworms That Refuse to Leave

Some earworms existed long before streaming, smartphones, or social media. They survived because the melody is simple, the phrase is unforgettable, or the whole thing sounds like it was engineered in a laboratory by mischievous songwriters.

  • It’s a Small World – Disney
  • Yellow Submarine – The Beatles
  • I Got You Babe – Sonny & Cher
  • 867-5309/Jenny – Tommy Tutone
  • Funkytown – Lipps Inc.
  • The Lion Sleeps Tonight – The Tokens
  • Mah Nà Mah Nà – The Muppets
  • Surfin’ Bird – The Trashmen
  • Mickey – Toni Basil
  • Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go – Wham!

Novelty Earworms and Comedy Songs

Novelty songs are earworm specialists. They know the shortcut: repeat a silly phrase, add a weird sound, include a dance or joke, and stand back while humanity loses control of the chorus.

  • The Fox (What Does the Fox Say?) – Ylvis
  • Who Let the Dogs Out? – Baha Men
  • Friday – Rebecca Black
  • Hamster Dance – Hampton the Hamster
  • Peanut Butter Jelly Time – Buckwheat Boyz
  • Fish Heads – Barnes & Barnes
  • The Song That Never Ends – Shari Lewis and Lamb Chop
  • Take Off – Bob & Doug McKenzie featuring Geddy Lee
  • Pac-Man Fever – Buckner & Garcia
  • Da Da Da – Trio

Children’s Songs, TV Themes and Movie Earworms

Children’s songs and TV themes are especially dangerous because they are short, repetitive, and often heard hundreds of times by adults who once had dreams. A good kids’ earworm does not knock. It just moves in.

  • Baby Shark – Pinkfong
  • It’s a Small World – Disney
  • Let It Go – Idina Menzel
  • Hakuna Matata – Nathan Lane, Ernie Sabella, Jason Weaver, and Joseph Williams
  • DuckTales Theme – Disney Television Animation
  • The Andy Griffith Theme – Earle Hagen and Herbert Spencer
  • The Banana Splits Theme – The Banana Splits
  • The Lollipop Guild – The Munchkins
  • Rubber Duckie – Ernie
  • Mah Nà Mah Nà – The Muppets

Dance Craze Earworms

Dance songs become earworms because the body remembers them, too. Once a song has a move attached, it can haunt both your brain and your knees.

  • Macarena – Los del Río
  • Gangnam Style – PSY
  • Cotton Eye Joe – Rednex
  • The Chicken Dance – Werner Thomas / Traditional party dance
  • The Time Warp – The Rocky Horror Picture Show Cast
  • The Hustle – Van McCoy and the Soul City Symphony
  • HOT TO GO! – Chappell Roan
  • Apple – Charli xcx
  • Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It) – Beyoncé
  • U Can’t Touch This – MC Hammer

Pop Hooks That Stick Hard

Some pop songs are not novelty records at all. They are simply built with hooks so strong that the chorus becomes mental wallpaper. You do not choose these songs. They choose you.

  • Can’t Get You Out of My Head – Kylie Minogue
  • Bad Romance – Lady Gaga
  • Call Me Maybe – Carly Rae Jepsen
  • Poker Face – Lady Gaga
  • Umbrella – Rihanna featuring Jay-Z
  • Shake It Off – Taylor Swift
  • Levitating – Dua Lipa
  • Blinding Lights – The Weeknd
  • Espresso – Sabrina Carpenter
  • APT. – ROSÉ and Bruno Mars

Rock, Rap and Party Earworms

Earworms are not limited to bubblegum pop. Rock chants, rap hooks, party shouts, bass lines, and stadium rhythms can be just as sticky. Sometimes the catchiest part is not the chorus. Sometimes it is one riff, one beat, or one yelled phrase.

  • We Will Rock You – Queen
  • Song 2 – Blur
  • Seven Nation Army – The White Stripes
  • Insane in the Brain – Cypress Hill
  • Whoomp! (There It Is) – Tag Team
  • It’s Tricky – Run-D.M.C.
  • Paper Planes – M.I.A.
  • Old Town Road – Lil Nas X featuring Billy Ray Cyrus
  • Sweet Caroline – Neil Diamond
  • Eye of the Tiger – Survivor

Earworm Song Trivia

  • Researchers use the term “involuntary musical imagery” for earworms. That is the science-friendly way of saying your brain has decided to play Baby Shark without permission.
  • Lady Gaga was a major earworm study winner. An APA-reported study named Bad Romance as the most frequently mentioned earworm, with Poker Face also appearing among the top examples.
  • Can’t Get You Out of My Head is almost too honest. Kylie Minogue’s title says exactly what the song does.
  • Gangnam Style became the first YouTube video to reach 1 billion views. PSY’s hit helped prove how a song, dance, and video could become a global internet event.
  • Some earworms work because they are annoying. A song does not have to be beautiful to be sticky. Sometimes irritation is just catchiness wearing cheap sunglasses.
  • Children’s songs are built for repetition. That makes them helpful for kids and hazardous for adults who have already heard Baby Shark today.
  • Modern earworms often come with choreography. TikTok and short-video platforms help songs like HOT TO GO! and Apple stick through both sound and movement.

Why Earworms Get Stuck in Your Head

Earworms usually work because the brain likes patterns. A short, clear melodic phrase, a repeated hook, a memorable rhythm, or a surprising sound can make a song easier to remember and harder to dismiss.

Repetition helps, but so does novelty. That is why It’s a Small World, Mah Nà Mah Nà, Macarena, Bad Romance, and Espresso can all become earworms for different reasons. One is a theme-park loop. One is nonsense. One is a dance. One is pop architecture. One is a caffeinated flirtation with a chorus that brought its own key card.

The worst part is that trying not to think about a song can make it stronger. Your brain hears “do not sing Call Me Maybe” and politely replies, “Here’s my number.”

Sources and Further Reading

The Songs That Refuse to Leave

Earworm songs are proof that music does not need to be long, serious, or even welcome to be powerful. Sometimes all it takes is a few notes, a silly chant, a dance move, or one tiny chorus that will not stop knocking.

From It’s a Small World to Baby Shark, from Macarena to Bad Romance, and from Can’t Get You Out of My Head to Espresso, these songs live where memory, melody, annoyance, and joy all share the same very crowded apartment.