Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne (long the band’s famed frontman) have a heavy (metal) legacy of hit albums on the Billboard 200 chart, dating to when the group notched its first chart entry with its self-titled debut in 1970. Through the years, the band, and Osbourne with solo projects, has rocked the chart with a series of high-charting albums.
The band logged a series of top 40-charting efforts over the decades, first reaching the top 10 in 1971 with Master of Reality, which climbed to No. 8. The group last hit the chart with the reunion project 13, released in 2013, which marked the group’s second top 10, and first No. 1.
Osbourne himself as a soloist has claimed nine top 10-charting sets on the Billboard 200, including at least one in every decade from the 1980s through the 2020s. He most recently hit the top 10 with the No. 3-peaking Patient Number 9 in 2022. Along the way, Osbourne also claimed a pair of top 10 charting songs on the Billboard Hot 100, with his Lita Ford duet “Close My Eyes Forever” (No. 8 in 1989) and his featured turn, alongside Travis Scott, on Post Malone’s “Take What You Want” (No. 8 in 2019).
Below is a combined top 10 ranking of both Black Sabbath and Osbourne’s biggest albums on the Billboard 200 chart. The ranking is based on actual performance on the weekly Billboard 200 through the July 5, 2025, chart. Titles are ranked on an inverse point system, with weeks at No. 1 earning the greatest value and weeks at No. 200 earning the least. Due to changes in chart methodology over the years, eras are weighted to account for different chart turnover rates over various periods.
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Black Rain, Ozzy Osbourne
Peak Position: No. 3
Peak Date: June 9, 2007The set spent 20 weeks on the Billboard 200 and housed the single “I Don’t Wanna Stop,” which spent five weeks atop the Mainstream Rock Airplay chart.
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Blizzard of Ozz, Ozzy Osbourne
Peak Position: No. 21
Peak Date: Aug. 8, 1981While Blizzard of Ozz may have peaked outside the top 20 on the weekly Billboard 200, Osbourne’s debut solo effort spent a mighty 107 weeks on the chart in total — the most of any Osbourne or Black Sabbath album. The set launched one of Osbourne’s most famous hits, “Crazy Train,” which reached No. 9 on the Mainstream Rock Airplay chart in 1981.
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Vol. 4, Black Sabbath
Peak Position: No. 13
Peak Date: Dec. 23, 1972The band’s appropriately titled fourth studio album, Vol. 4, spent 31 weeks on the chart and marked the fourth top 40-charting effort for the group in less than two years, dating to the group’s self-titled debut in 1970.
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Tribute, Ozzy Osbourne/Randy Rhoads
Peak Position: No. 6
Peak Date: June 13, 1987The live album from Osbourne includes performances with guitarist Randy Rhoads, who played with Osbourne’s band in the late 1970s and into the early 1980s, and died in 1982. The set spun off a single in a live rendition of “Crazy Train,” which also garnered its first official music video.
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Diary of a Madman, Ozzy Osbourne
Peak Position: No. 16
Peak Date: Dec. 19, 1981Osbourne’s second solo studio album was his first to reach the top 20 on the weekly Billboard 200, peaking at No. 16, and spending 75 total weeks on the chart. The set includes the radio single “Flying High Again,” which peaked at No. 2 on the Mainstream Rock Airplay chart.
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13, Black Sabbath
Peak Position: No. 1 (one week)
Peak Date: June 29, 2013Forty-three years after Black Sabbath made its debut on the Billboard 200, the band scored its first No. 1 with the chart-topping debut of the reunion project 13. It was the first studio album with Osbourne since 1978’s Never Say Die!
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Paranoid, Black Sabbath
Peak Position: No. 12
Peak Date: March 20, 1971The band’s second studio album reached No. 12 and launched the group’s only two charted hits on the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart: the title track (peaking No. 61 in December 1970) and “Iron Man” (No. 52 in March 1972).
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Master of Reality, Black Sabbath
Peak Position: No. 8
Peak Date: Sept. 25, 1971When the album, the group’s third studio set, reached No. 8 on Sept. 25, 1971 (sandwiched between albums by Carpenters and the Partridge Family), it marked the first top 10 for the band — and the only top 10 it would claim until the chart-topping reunion set 13 in 2013.
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No More Tears, Ozzy Osbourne
Peak Position: No. 7
Peak Date: Oct. 5, 1991No More Tears launched a pair of Hot 100-charting singles in the title track (No. 71) and “Mama, I’m Coming Home” (No. 28). The latter remains Osbourne’s only top 40 hit on the all-genre Hot 100 unaccompanied by any other act. On the Mainstream Rock Airplay chart, the set generated five top 40-charting titles: “No More Tears” (No. 10), “Mama” (No. 2), “Road to Nowhere” (No. 3), “Mr. Tinkertrain” (No. 34) and “Time After Time” (No. 6). The album No More Tears would remain on the Billboard 200 for 86 weeks — the second-longest run of any Osbourne solo album, after Blizzard of Ozz‘s 107 weeks.
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The Ultimate Sin, Ozzy Osbourne
Peak Position: No. 6
Peak Date: April 5, 1986The Ultimate Sin reigns as the No. 1 album on this combined ranking of the top 10 albums by Osbourne and Black Sabbath. The set reached No. 6 in April of 1986 and spent 13 weeks inside the weekly top 20 — the most of any album by Osbourne or Sabbath. The album generated a hit single in “Shot In the Dark,” which became Osbourne’s first solo Hot 100 entry, peaking No. 68 in April 1986. It would also hit No. 10 on the Mainstream Rock Airplay chart.