Box office Barbie grossed $636.8 million in the United States and Canada, and $810.9 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $1.448 billion.
Deadline Hollywood calculated the film's net profit as $421million, accounting for production budgets, marketing, talent participations, and other costs; box office grosses, television and streaming, and home media revenues placed it second on their list of 2023's "Most Valuable Blockbusters". It was described as a "record-breaking" box office success during its opening weekend, and set the record for any film that was not a sequel, remake, or
superhero property.
Barbie became the highest-grossing live-action comedy film of all time, smashing the domestic record formerly held by
Home Alone (1990) and the worldwide record formerly held by
The Hangover Part II (2011) simultaneously. It has also become Gerwig's highest-grossing film, overtaking its predecessor
Little Women (2019). The film crossed the $1 billion mark worldwide on August 6, 2023, making it the only film by a solo female director to do so. In late August,
Barbie surpassed that same film again, becoming Warner Bros.'s highest-grossing film, not adjusted for inflation. By September 2, the film surpassed $1.365 billion at the global box office, replacing
The Super Mario Bros. Movie as the highest-grossing film of the year. Additionally, it became the highest-grossing film by a solo female director, surpassing the previous record held by
Jia Ling for
Hi, Mom (2021).
United States and Canada In the United States and Canada,
Barbie was released alongside
Oppenheimer, and was originally projected to gross $90–125 million from 4,243 theaters in its opening weekend, with Warner Bros. predicting a $75 million debut. The week of their release,
AMC Theatres announced that over 40,000 AMC Stubs members had pre-booked tickets to
both films on the same day. It earned $70.5 million on its opening day, which included $22.3 million from Wednesday and Thursday night previews, both of which were the best of 2023.
Barbies opening weekend gross of $162 million marked the largest opening since
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever ($181.3 million in November 2022). It was also the biggest opening ever for a film helmed by a female director, besting
Captain Marvel (2019), and surpassed
Suicide Squad (2016) to have Robbie's highest opening weekend, as well as
Blade Runner 2049 (2017) to have Gosling's largest opening weekend. It scored the third-highest July opening weekend at the time, behind
The Lion King (2019) and
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2. This also marked the third-highest opening weekend for a Warner Bros. film, after the latter film and
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016).
Barbie also scored the biggest opening for a film based on a toy, surpassing
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009). Furthermore, it dethroned
The Secret Life of Pets (2016) to achieve the biggest non-sequel July opening weekend. Following its opening weekend,
Barbie surpassed
The Dark Knight (2008) as the highest Monday gross ever for a Warner Bros. film, collecting a total of $26.1 million. It also quickly beat
La La Land (2016) to become Gosling's highest-grossing film of all time. In its second weekend, the film earned $92 million, dropping by 43%, which was the largest sophomore weekend ever for a Warner Bros. film and the seventh-largest ever. The film remained in first place with $53 million in its third weekend, and $33.7 million in its fourth weekend. On August 16, 2023,
Barbie once again surpassed
The Dark Knight, this time as the highest-grossing domestic release in Warner Bros. history, having earned $537.5 million. The film was dethroned in its fifth weekend by newcomer
Blue Beetle ($25 million), though it continued to hold well with a gross of $21.5 million. On August 24, 2023,
Barbie surpassed
The Super Mario Bros. Movie ($574 million) to become the highest-grossing film of the year in North America.
Barbie finished in second place again in its sixth weekend, this time behind newcomer
Gran Turismo.
Other territories Outside of the United States and Canada,
Barbie earned $194.3 million from 69 offshore markets in its opening weekend. Of the 69 markets, it was the number one film for the weekend in 58, scored the largest opening weekend for a Warner Bros. film in 26 and marked the largest opening for a 2023 film in 24. In the United Kingdom, the film opened with $24.2 million, which was the year's largest opening. In France, it opened with $10.2 million, marking the largest debut for a Warner Bros. film since
Joker (2019). The following weekend,
Barbie earned $127 million, dropping by just 31%. It remained the number one film of the weekend in 57 markets. Within its sophomore weekend, it became the highest-grossing film of 2023 in Brazil, as well as the highest-grossing Warner Bros. release ever. In Australia, the film scored the largest second week ever, for a running total of $30.6 million after two weekends. In the UK,
Barbie began outpacing the ten-day total of
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2, Warner Bros.' highest-grossing film in the country, in its second weekend. In its third weekend,
Barbie grossed $74 million from 69 markets for a drop of 41%. The highest-grossing overseas markets were the
United Kingdom ($120.8 million),
Germany ($56.5 million),
Australia ($55.6 million),
Mexico ($54.3 million), and
France ($47.6 million). In Ireland,
Barbie became the highest-grossing film in history with $9.57 million, surpassing
Avatar (2009). By contrast, in
South Korea (where the film opened on July 19, 2023),
Barbie underperformed at the box office. During the period between July 28 and 30, 2023, the film recorded around 81,000 admissions (earning $667,000) and finished in the fifth place in the South Korean box office, falling behind
Smugglers (around 1.17 million admissions; $9.31 million),
Elemental (around 360,000 admissions; $2.85 million),
Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One (around 300,000 admissions; $2.43 million) and
Detective Conan: Black Iron Submarine (around 89,000 admissions; $703,000). It was suggested that the animosity against feminist messages in the film, the lack of popularity of
Barbie dolls in South Korea, and cultural differences between United States and South Korea have contributed to the film's under-performance there. In an interview with
The Hollywood Reporter, Kang Hye-jung, the producer of
Smugglers, said "I couldn't understand why Hollywood went so wild about
Barbie, perhaps because it has never been our [toy]." Writing for
The Korea Times, professor emeritus Mark Peterson at
Brigham Young University opined that the film under-performed in South Korea because "it was one fully-loaded package of American culture of the last 50 years, which didn't convey much meaning to [South] Korean audiences". In Japan,
Barbie ranked at no. 16. Prior to the release date, public opinion of
Barbie had soured after the official Twitter account for the
Barbie film had responded positively to several Barbenheimer memes, all of which depicted atomic bombing mushroom clouds comically. This was seen as an endorsement of such jokes, and, in turn, was met with disapproval from the Japanese public, who criticized their ignorance, particularly due to their negligence towards the history of the
atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Mitsuki Takahata, who provided Barbie's voice in the Japanese dub of the film, stated on her
Instagram account that she was disappointed and had considered dropping out of one of the film's promotional events. In China,
Barbie earned more than $32 million as of August 2023.
Critical response Barbie attained widespread critical acclaim. Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale, while those polled by
PostTrak gave it an 89% overall positive score, with 79% saying they would definitely recommend the film.
Richard Brody of
The New Yorker called it "brilliant, beautiful and fun as hell", claiming the "giddily stylized vision of a doll coming to life makes a serious case for the art of adapting even the most sanitized
I.P." and commended the "free and wild" direction as well as the "profuse and exquisite" visual aesthetics. Charlotte O'Sullivan of the
Evening Standard hailed the film as "easily the comedy of the year" with a large amount of fun, where "star and producer Margot Robbie, and writer-director Greta Gerwig, have done themselves proud" with a "breezily outrageous" film "about a woman's right to be 'weird, dark and crazy'". Eileen Jones of
Jacobin said that the film "manages to overcome cumbersome plotting and feminist pieties to provide a delightful spectacle of funny moments that add up to something pretty good". In
The Guardian,
Peter Bradshaw awarded
Barbie a three out of five stars, describing it as "beamingly affectionate and deliriously pink-themed" but "perhaps a giant two-hour commercial for a product" and highlighted Gosling as a scene-stealer, being given "all the best lines". Lovia Gyarke of
The Hollywood Reporter called the film a "tricky balancing act of corporate fealty and subversion" lauding Gerwig's direction, the set design, costumes, soundtrack and lead performances, but criticizing the "muddled politics and flat emotional landing". In the
Vulture component of
New York, Alison Willmore commended the lead performances, particularly that of Robbie, whom she characterized "as capable of heartbreaking earnestness as humor, and who sometimes effortlessly achieved both at once", but lamented the themes of the film, opining that it "doesn't ultimately want to do much more than talk itself in circles about these themes". On a similar note,
Stephanie Zacharek of
Time praised Robbie's "buoyant, charming performance", Gosling's "go-for-broke" effort, and the "inventive production design", but criticized the "self aware" nature of the film especially following the first half-hour, concluding that it is a feminist film "only in the most scattershot way", and that it is not "subversive". A mixed review in
Le Monde also expressed doubts about the treatment of the topical issue and found that the "doll drowned herself in kitsch derision" while
GQ-France, regretting that the film did not prove as radical as might have been expected, found it was somehow a continuation of
Little Women.
Camilla Long of
The Times wrote that the film featured Mattel's "pink, squealing, corporate grasping", trying to be "ahead of the
sexism curve", but "ended up feeling sexist itself" for its portrayal that "men are stupid, go to the gym, run everything and don't care about women, while women are sensible, striving but ultimately conflicted victims". In the review by
Kyle Smith in
The Wall Street Journal, he stated: "As bubbly as the film appears, its script is like a grumpier-than-average women's studies seminar", exemplified by the Mattel employee character's "long monologue on how miserable it is to be female".
MovieWeb ranked it number 1 on its list of the "Best Comedy Movies of the 2020s (So Far)", writing that "Gerwig's ode to the Barbie girl and her Barbie world ... is as surprisingly modern and introspective as audiences have come to expect from her work. Scrunching 60 plus years of history into a two-hour time frame aside, this film gets straight at the heart of what it's like being a woman today while providing more than a laugh or two in the process." Chinese film critic Li Jingfei () praised the film's humor and criticism of patriarchy, qualifying that its themes were too often advanced by slogans rather than the experiences of its characters. Filmmakers such as
Allison Anders,
Joe Dante,
Drew Goddard,
Chad Hartigan,
Rachel Morrison and
Paul Schrader also cited the film as among their favorites of 2023. In June 2025,
IndieWire ranked the film at number 46 on its list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 2020s (So Far)." In July 2025, it ranked number 84 on the "Readers' Choice" edition of
The New York Times list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century."
Accolades The
National Board of Review and the
American Film Institute named
Barbie one of the top-ten films of 2023. The film's soundtrack album and score received 12 nominations at the
66th Annual Grammy Awards.
Barbie tied with
Cabaret (1972) for the second-most nominations in
Golden Globe Awards history, earning a leading nine at the
81st edition. It would ultimately win two awards at the ceremony, including
Best Original Song (for "What Was I Made For") and the inaugural
Golden Globe for Cinematic and Box Office Achievement. Earning 18 nominations at its
29th ceremony, the film received the most nominations in
Critics' Choice Movie Awards history. Longlisted in 15 categories at the
77th British Academy Film Awards,
Barbie (along with
Oppenheimer and
Killers of the Flower Moon) equaled the BAFTA longlist record for most nominations set by
Edward Berger's German
anti-war film All Quiet on the Western Front (2022). It also received eight nominations at the
96th Academy Awards, including
Best Picture,
Best Adapted Screenplay,
Best Supporting Actor (Gosling),
Best Supporting Actress (Ferrera) and two nominations for
Best Original Song (for "I'm Just Ken" and "What Was I Made For").{{cite magazine |first=Scott |last=Feinberg |title=Oscar Noms Analysis: 'Oppenheimer' Dominates, But 'Barbie' Snubs Could Jolt the Race ==Themes and analysis==