Chart history Amor Prohibido debuted at number three on the US
Billboard Top Latin Albums chart the week ending April 9, 1994. The following week it rose to number two and received the greatest jump in sales for that week. In an interview with
Billboard, A.B. was frustrated that the album had not yet reached number one. He explained that they were limited in their capabilities with Tejano music and spoke about his excitement when
Amor Prohibido finally topped the chart, saying the event "was a big thing [for us]."
Amor Prohibido peaked at number one in its tenth week, becoming the second album to place first on the newly formed Top Latin Albums chart displacing Cuban singer
Gloria Estefan's
Mi Tierra from the top spot. Sales were so vigorous it nearly entered the US
Billboard 200 and became the first Tejano record to peak at number one on the Top Latin Albums chart. The event marked Selena as the "hottest artist in the Latino market." The following week, the album entered the
Billboard 200 chart at number 183, becoming the first record by a non-crossover act to do so since Mexican singer
Luis Miguel's album
Aries (1993). The album also became the first recording by a Tejano singer to chart on the
Billboard 200. Mario Tarradell of
The Dallas Morning News called the event "groundbreaking" and named
Amor Prohibido as one of the most popular Latin recordings of 1994.
Amor Prohibido and
Mi Tierra switched back and forth between the first and second positions on the Top Latin Albums chart for five consecutive weeks. On July 16, the album debuted at number 18 on the US
Billboard Heatseekers Albums chart and ranked number one in the South Central United States region. By May 1994,
Amor Prohibido had outsold other competing Tejano albums and lead the list of best-selling Tejano records of 1994.
Amor Prohibido became the singer's third consecutive album to outsell men in the Tejano market who historically were unchallenged by women. By June 1994,
Amor Prohibido outsold
ZZ Top and
Willie Nelson's recent releases in the state of Texas. Within 19 weeks of its release, the album outsold her previous recordings. It was selling 2,000 units a week in Mexico, while Selena was growing a following in
Canada following the release of
Amor Prohibido. By November 1994 a report by
Billboard showed the singer was one of the top-selling acts in Mexico.
Amor Prohibido finished 1994 as the
fourth best-selling US Latin album and the best-selling regional Mexican album. After 48 weeks at number one on the US
Billboard Regional Mexican Albums chart,
Amor Prohibido was displaced by
Bronco's
Rompiendo Barreras. The recording became the second Tejano album to reach year-end sales of 500,000 copies, a feat that previously had only been accomplished by La Mafia. Despite this, Nielsen Soundscan reported that the recording actually sold 184,000 units by April 1995. According to Behar, sales figures Nielsen Soundscan provides do not include sales in small shops specializing in Latin music. Before Selena was murdered in March 1995, the album remained in the top five on the Top Latin Albums chart for 53 consecutive weeks. Album sales in the four weeks preceding her death were slightly above 2,000 units a week. In the week immediately before her death,
Amor Prohibido sold 1,700 units. In Mexico,
Amor Prohibido sold 400,000 units by April 1995, and subsequently received a gold certification.
Posthumous commercial performance Media attention had helped increased sales of
Amor Prohibido as well as her back catalogue. As a result, EMI Latin increased the production of the singer's albums at their Los Angeles, California, and Greensboro, North Carolina plants. In the hours immediately after her death, it was the most requested album by people in music stores looking for her work. An
Austin, Texas music retailer expressed how
Amor Prohibido sold more units in the first month following her death "than it did the entire year it was out." This was echoed by a music wholesaler in Manhattan, who constantly sold out of Selena's albums the same day they received them, telling the local newspaper that "It used to be just the Mexicans [in Manhattan]. Now everybody likes her." In
McAllen, Texas, music shops reported that people bought the singer's earlier works than
Amor Prohibido, citing that "most fans already have her latest [album]". Music stores in Washington, DC, reportedly sold out of
Amor Prohibido within days of her murder. The album reached number one for the fifth time on April 15, 1995, with sales of 12,040 units - a 580% increase over the previous week. The record subsequently re-entered the
Billboard 200 chart at number 92 and at number one on the Regional Mexican Albums chart. The album sold an additional 28,238 units (a 136% increase) and rose to number 36 on the
Billboard 200 chart.
Amor Prohibido peaked at number 29 during its fifth week on the
Billboard 200. The event was "a rare feat" for a non-English album in the United States. The album jumped from number 20 to number six on the list of the best-selling albums in
Southern California in the week following her death. The recording eventually ranked second on their list of the best-selling albums in the state. In a June 1995 report,
Amor Prohibido was the second best-selling record in Puerto Rico.
Amor Prohibido and her 1992 studio album
Entre a Mi Mundo, rose 1,250% in sales in the eight weeks following her murder. The album helped increase local record shops in Texas who were "selling more than when [Selena] was alive".
Amor Prohibido remained at number one on the Top Latin Albums chart for 16 weeks following her death until the release of her crossover album
Dreaming of You replaced it on August 5. The album remained behind
Dreaming of You for seven weeks. By the end of 1995,
Amor Prohibido ranked second to
Dreaming of You for the best-selling Latin album for that year, and remained the best-selling regional Mexican recording for three consecutive years. After 98 weeks the album dropped from the top five on the Top Latin Albums chart, though it remained within the top ten for 12 additional weeks.
Amor Prohibido holds the record for most weeks at number one on the Regional Mexican Albums chart at 97 weeks, and is the only album to reach number one in four different calendar years.
Amor Prohibido became the ninth best-selling Latin album of 1996, and ranked as the second best-selling Latin catalog album of 1997, while in 1998 it placed third.
Billboards revised catalog criteria made it ineligible for the Top Latin Albums and Regional Mexican Albums chart on January 18, 1997. The album was removed from the list and began charting on the newly formed Latin Catalog Albums chart positioned at number two. Since 1997, the album has spent 13 nonconsecutive weeks at number one on the Top Latin Catalog Albums chart including three weeks in 2010. Following another revision to its Latin albums charts,
Billboard removed its two-decade-long ban of catalog albums in its chart beginning with the February 11, 2017 list;
Amor Prohibido re-entered the Top Latin Albums and Regional Mexican Albums chart after 20 years. Still popular today,
Nielsen SoundScan reported that
Amor Prohibido was the ninth best-selling Latin record of 2016. After its revision,
Amor Prohibido reclaimed the number one position on the Regional Mexican Albums chart in May 2017.
Amor Prohibido was the first album by a woman to claim the top position since
Jenni Rivera's
Paloma Negra Desde Monterrey (2016).
Amor Prohibido became the
last album by a woman to claim the top spot until Rivera's daughter
Chiquis Rivera debuted atop the chart in March 2018. As of 2018, the album has spent twenty weeks atop the Top Latin Albums chart, which is the ninth most weeks an album has spent at number one.
Amor Prohibido has spent 111 weeks within the top ten of the Top Latin Albums chart, which is the second most weeks behind American singer
Romeo Santos'
Formula, Vol. 2 (2014). In May 1995, the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)
certified the album gold, for shipments of 500,000 units. Within three weeks, it was certified platinum for increments of one million units.
Amor Prohibido became the first Tejano record to receive a platinum certification. The
Sydney Morning Herald called the event "an achievement" for a Spanish-language album which was not "the music industry's language of choice." By June 1995, it had sold 1.5 million units in the US, of which 100,000 were sold in Puerto Rico alone. In March 2011, the RIAA updated its certification of
Amor Prohibido as double Diamond during an unveiling of the
United States Postal Service's
forever stamps honoring Selena and several other Hispanic/Latino Americans. The album was remastered for its 30th anniversary, selling 11,000 units across multiple configurations. It debuted at number four on the US
Top Album Sales chart on the week ending July 20, 2024, achieving its highest peak position.
Amor Prohibido debuted atop the US
Top Vinyl Albums chart, marking her second number-one title in this category, and debuted at number 20 on the US
Top Catalog Albums chart, and returned to the
Billboard 200 chart at number 69. , the album has been certified 41× platinum (Latin), denoting 2.46 million
album-equivalent units sold.
Amor Prohibido is the second-highest
certified Latin album in the United States trailing only her posthumous album
Dreaming of You (1995).
Amor Prohibido is the fourth
best-selling Latin album of all-time in the US with over 1.246 million copies sold . The album has sold over 2.5 million copies worldwide. The recording has been ranked as the best-selling Tejano album of the 1990s, and the best-selling Tejano album of all-time. == Track listing ==