Top 100 México was a
record chart which accounted for sixty percent of the
albums sold in
Mexico. The chart had the support of major record distributors in Mexico and was issued by the
Asociación Mexicana de Productores de Fonogramas y Videogramas (AMPROFON; English: Mexican Association of Producers of Phonograms and Videograms, A.C.) on a weekly basis from 2005 until July 9, 2020, when the chart was discontinued.[1] The Top 100 México contained over 100 titles sold in the country, with separate charts that include 20 albums for popular music genres, such as
norteño,
banda and
ranchera,
Spanish, and
English language albums.[1]
In 2005, the best-selling album in Mexico was the
soundtrack for the TV series Rebelde, recorded by the lead cast members, who eventually formed the band
RBD;[2] in the United States the album sold 416,000 copies and was named the Pop Album of the Year at the
Billboard Latin Music Awards.[3]La Voz de un Ángel by
Yuridia was the number-one selling album of 2006 (also ranked at number 5 in 2005 and 52 in 2007),[4][5][6] and the album eventually received a diamond certification in the country, the first since 1996 when performer
Luis Miguel achieved that feat.[7]Papito by Spanish performer
Miguel Bosé was the best-selling album of 2007, received the
Oye! Award for Album of the Year and earned four
Latin Grammy Award nominations.[8]
Para Siempre, the 79th studio album released by
Vicente Fernández was the number-one album of 2008 in Mexico and the best-selling Regional-Mexican album of the decade 2000-2009 in the United States.[9] Mexican band
Camila earned a gold certification in Mexico the day of the release of their second studio album Dejarte de Amar, which ended 2010 as the best-selling recording in the country.[10] From May 2013, some positions of the chart were published in the official
Twitter account of AMPROFON, including the number one position.[11]