Garbage (album) - Comprehensive Charts

Comprehensive Charts

Charts

Chart (1995) Peak
Australia Albums Chart (ARIA) 5
New Zealand Albums Chart (RIANZ) 11
United Kingdom Albums Chart (CIN) 12
United States Heatseekers (Billboard) 5
United States Billboard 200 127
Chart (1996) Peak
Australia Albums Chart (ARIA) 4
Belgium (Flanders) Ultratip 50 debut albums (BEA) 34
Belgium (Wallonia) Ultratop 50 debut albums (BEA) 20
European Top 100 debut albums (Billboard/Music & Media) 15
Finland Albums Chart (ÄKT / IFPI Finland) 23
France Album Chart (SNEP) 16
Germany Albums Chart (Media Control) 66
Iceland Album Chart (IFPI) 20
Netherlands Album Chart (GfK) 33
New Zealand Albums Chart (RIANZ) 1
Sweden Albums Chart (SRIA) 19
United Kingdom Albums Chart (CIN) 6
United States Heatseekers (Billboard) 2
United States Billboard 200 20
Chart (1997) Peak
Belgium (Wallonia) Ultratop 50 debut albums (BEA) 26 RE
Germany Albums Chart (Media Control) 76 RE
Norway Albums Chart (Nielsen SoundScan) 30
Chart (1999) Peak
Finland Albums Chart (ÄKT / IFPI Finland) 28 RE

Year-End charts

Chart (1996) Position
Australian Albums 27
United Kingdom Albums 25
U.S. Billboard 200 52

Certifications

Country Certifications Units shipped/sales
Australia 2 × Platinum 140,000
Canada 2 × Platinum 140,000
Denmark Gold 10,000
France Gold 150,000
Germany not certified 230,000+
Ireland Gold 7,500
New Zealand 2 × Platinum 30,000
Philippine Gold 10,000
Portugal Gold 10,000
Singapore Gold 5,000
United Kingdom 2 × Platinum 701,757 (as of 2012)
United States 2 × Platinum 2,400,000 (actual sales, as of 2008)

Chart procession and succession

Preceded by
New Adventures in Hi-Fi by R.E.M.
New Zealand Albums Chart
number-one album

October 20–26, 1996
Succeeded by
Ænima by Tool

Read more about this topic:  Garbage (album)

Famous quotes containing the word charts:

    There’s one basic rule you should remember about development charts that will save you countless hours of worry.... The fact that a child passes through a particular developmental stage is always more important than the age of that child when he or she does it. In the long run, it really doesn’t matter whether you learn to walk at ten months or fifteen months—as long as you learn how to walk.
    Lawrence Kutner (20th century)