Source:
https://scmp.com/magazines/style/celebrity/article/3203984/which-christmas-song-makes-most-money-annual-earnings-ranked-mariah-careys-all-i-want-christmas-you
Style/ Celebrities

Which Christmas song makes the most money? Annual earnings, ranked: from Mariah Carey’s ‘All I Want for Christmas is You’ and Paul McCartney’s ‘Wonderful Christmastime’ to Wham!’s ‘Last Christmas’

  • Christmas music is loved for its holly-jolly nature, but it’s also proved to be a very lucrative venture for artists, with Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande and Justin Bieber launching holiday albums
  • The biggest festive money-makers however all date from the 1970s and 80s – think perennial party-starters Slade’s ‘Merry Christmas Everybody’ and The Pogues’ ‘Fairytale of New York’
The most lucrative Christmas songs ever, brought to you by Bing Crosby, Paul McCartney, Mariah Carey and Wham!. Photos: Handout; @paulmccartney, @mariahcarey, @georgemichael_andrewridgeley/Instagram

Whether you love it or loathe it, Christmas music is a genre that you simply cannot avoid. As soon as November’s up, the classics come flooding in on every speaker, radio station, supermarket, shop, family household – rolling in on the first day of December in their gorging, shameless glory. Call it a guilty pleasure if you will. Even the scrooges can’t resist.

A quarter-century after releasing her holiday classic that’s become one of the season’s love-to-hate, hate-to-love clichés, Mariah Carey has finally pushed “All I Want for Christmas Is You” to top the charts for the first time. Photo: YouTube
A quarter-century after releasing her holiday classic that’s become one of the season’s love-to-hate, hate-to-love clichés, Mariah Carey has finally pushed “All I Want for Christmas Is You” to top the charts for the first time. Photo: YouTube

It’s a known fact that Christmas music is one of the biggest money makers and some of the best hits can generate royalty income to last a lifetime. Modern artists like Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande, Justin Bieber and Kylie Minogue have all launched dedicated holiday albums that are practically guaranteed cash cows thanks to loyal fans celebrating with their idols for the season – but none are raking in royalties as reliably as the 10 perennial festive faves on this list.

So, here STYLE takes a look at which Christmas songs earn the most money annually, and we’ve even done you the favour of embedding the musical hits so you can hum along through the list. Without further ado ...

10. East 17: ‘Stay Another Day’ (1994)

Estimated annual earnings: US$118,000

East 17 has gone through multiple changes in its band members, since its inception in the 1990s. Photo: @officialeast17/Instagram
East 17 has gone through multiple changes in its band members, since its inception in the 1990s. Photo: @officialeast17/Instagram

It’s been nearly three decades since this festive hit was released.

But given that the heart-rending song is about the tragic death of band member Tony Mortimer’s brother, some critics pointed out that it shouldn’t be considered a Christmas song amid its jolly competitors. Either way, the winter-themed tune earns about US$118,000 annually, per the UK’s The Independent (source of all our estimates for this piece, unless otherwise stated).

9. Cliff Richard: ‘Mistletoe and Wine’ (1988)

Estimated annual earnings: US$120,000

Cliff Richard performing during the Diamond Jubilee concert in front of Buckingham Palace in London in June 2012. Photo: Reuters
Cliff Richard performing during the Diamond Jubilee concert in front of Buckingham Palace in London in June 2012. Photo: Reuters

A cosy Christmas fixture filled with lyrics about mistletoe, wine, logs around the fire and gifts under the tree, Richards’ 1988 song rakes in about US$120,000 a year.

That’s pretty neat considering he’s now 82, and probably enjoying the high life as the third-top-selling artist in UK Singles Chart history, just behind Elvis Presley and The Beatles.

8. The Pretenders: ‘2000 Miles’ (1983)

Estimated annual earnings: US$125,000

The Pretenders was formed in Hereford, UK, in 1978. Photo: @thepretendershq/Instagram
The Pretenders was formed in Hereford, UK, in 1978. Photo: @thepretendershq/Instagram

Is it even Christmas if you’re not listening to this holiday favourite?

The Pretenders’ 1980s ballad may be set to a snowy music video, but again, it wasn’t intended to be festive. According to Smooth Radio, it’s believed to be a tribute to one of the band’s founding members, James Honeyman-Scott, who died of a cocaine-induced heart failure in 1982 at age 25.

In an interview with Dutch show Countdown in 1983, lead singer Chrissie Hynde, now 71, was asked about the song’s meaning, and said, “It’s about someone who’s gone … and let’s just say it’s Father Christmas.” The Telegraph stated that it makes US$125,000 every year.

7. Jona Lewie: ‘Stop The Cavalry’ (1978)

Estimated annual earnings: US$145,000

Jona Lewie’s Christmas song is a radio staple every December. Photo: @jona.lewie/Instagram
Jona Lewie’s Christmas song is a radio staple every December. Photo: @jona.lewie/Instagram

Despite its annual radio resurgence come year end, Lewie’s “Stop the Cavalry” actually has little to do with Christmas. The singer, who makes a cool US$145,000 a year from it, has explained to Gold Radio UK that it was written as an anti-war sentiment.

The lyrics have references to the gallant soldiers of the Crimean war, nuclear fallout shelters and the light brigade, followed by the iconic refrain, “I wish I was at home for Christmas.”

6. Paul McCartney: ‘Wonderful Christmastime’ (1979)

Estimated annual earnings: US$315,000

Paul McCartney inducting the Foo Fighters into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in October 2021. Photo: AP
Paul McCartney inducting the Foo Fighters into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in October 2021. Photo: AP

Brought to you by The Beatles’ bass guitarist, “Wonderful Christmastime” is a festive staple that celebrates the season, with McCartney, 80, making about US$315,000 from it annually.

5. Wham!: ‘Last Christmas’ (1986)

Estimated annual earnings: US$365,000

Wham!’s George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley. Photo: Getty Images
Wham!’s George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley. Photo: Getty Images

You know you’ve pulled the right heart strings when your song’s been covered by modern artists including Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande, Miley Cyrus, Gwen Stefani and Rita Ora, nearly four decades after its release.

The love song from Wham!’s English childhood friends George Michael (1963-2016) and Andrew Ridgeley, 59, still makes an incredible US$365,000 every year.

4. Bing Crosby: ‘White Christmas’ (1942)

Estimated annual earnings: US$400,000

US singer and film actor Bing Crosby (1904–1977) as he appears in the film White Christmas. Photo: Keystone
US singer and film actor Bing Crosby (1904–1977) as he appears in the film White Christmas. Photo: Keystone

Another song that’s also been further popularised with a plethora of covers, from artists as diverse as Michael Bublé and Frank Sinatra to Lady Gaga and Elvis Presley, “White Christmas” is touted as America’s favourite Christmas song.

But its original ballad was first popularised by crooner Bing Crosby (1903-1977) in 1942. Penned by legendary songwriter Irving Berlin for the film Holiday Inn, it comes with a sad backstory. According to Country Living, Berlin’s three-week-old son had died on Christmas Day and it’s believed the song may be a tribute to his late infant and Berlin’s ongoing mourning.

3. Mariah Carey: ‘All I Want for Christmas is You’ (1994)

Estimated annual earnings: US$485,000

Mariah Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas” is a bona fide festive classic – but it’s not the biggest blockbuster at the bank. Photo: @mariahcarey/Instagram
Mariah Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas” is a bona fide festive classic – but it’s not the biggest blockbuster at the bank. Photo: @mariahcarey/Instagram

Back in 1994, Carey described this inescapable Christmas mega-hit as “very traditional, old-fashioned Christmas”, per Smooth Radio. It includes all the traditional festive tropes, from Santa, presents, tree and reindeers to its lovey-dovey title.

The holidays’ favourite pop diva earns about US$485,000 a year from her iconic anthem – which should keep her well until the next year rolls round.

2. The Pogues and Kirsty MacColl: ‘Fairytale of New York’ (1988)

Estimated annual earnings: US$485,000

Singers Kirsty MacColl (1959–2000) and Shane MacGowan with toy guns and an inflatable Santa in a festive scenario, circa 1987. Photo: Getty Images
Singers Kirsty MacColl (1959–2000) and Shane MacGowan with toy guns and an inflatable Santa in a festive scenario, circa 1987. Photo: Getty Images

This anti-Christmas song still consecutively rakes in US$485,000 in earnings every year.

It depicts the wintertime bickering between a couple, and while its original lyrics are considered controversial due to its explicit language, the melody is loved for its bitter, emotionally relatable nature – and goes down especially well at rowdier festive gatherings.

1. Slade: ‘Merry Christmas Everybody’ (1973)

Estimated annual earnings: US$1.2 million

Slade is an English rock band that everyone remembers for just one thing. Photo: @sladeband/Instagram
Slade is an English rock band that everyone remembers for just one thing. Photo: @sladeband/Instagram

“It’s Chriiiiiiistmaaaaas!” The English rock band comes in at No 1 with about US$1.2 million in annual earnings.

Co-writer and singer Noddy Holder, 76, claims the tune was written to reflect a traditional British family Christmas amid the era’s crippling economic crisis. “The miners had been on strike, along with the gravediggers, the bakers and almost everybody else,” he told British media in 2007. “I think people wanted something to cheer them up – and so did I.”

Today, it continues to climb the charts – and has proved to be a financially lucrative cheer-up for the band!

Want more stories like this? Follow STYLE on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Twitter.