
Ye (formerly Kanye West) has redefined rap in the 21st century while pushing the sonic boundaries as a trendsetter in what’s been accepted in hip-hop’s mainstream. With every blockbuster album release, West tears down what’s left behind and builds a completely new world, each album sounding nothing the previous.
As a self-proclaimed futurist, West doesn’t often look back when it comes to his creations of the past, keeping both eyes on the road of what’s to come. “I don’t care about having a legacy, I don’t care about being remembered,” he told Time in 2015. “I’m not in a competition with anyone. None of us will be remembered.”
A plethora of antisemitic remarks and hate-filled rants have damaged West’s reputation — particularly in the last few years — resulting in partners like Gap, Balenciaga, Universal Music Group, Live Nation and Adidas severing ties with the Chicago native.
Ye apologized to the Jewish and Black communities in January, and inked a deal with Larry Jackson’s Gamma earlier in 2026, before returning with his 12th studio album, Bully, on March 28. The LP debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 with 152,000 equivalent album units earned in the tracking week ending April 2.
As one of the century’s premier hitmakers and influential artists invading music’s A-list, ranking West’s albums has been a passionate discussion among hip-hop fans for two decades, and Billboard‘s Michael Saponara and Armon Sadler will be adding to that with the list here.
Remember, this list is solely Ye’s solo albums, which means Watch the Throne, Cruel Summer and the pair of Vultures joint projects were excluded. Find the full ranking of Ye’s 12 solo albums below.



