Greg Prato of
AllMusic called the song "one of the few bright spots" of mid-1994, when "the world was still reeling from
Nirvana leader
Kurt Cobain's
suicide the previous April". He said, "The song had a
psychedelic edge to it (especially evident in the verse's guitar part), as the composition shifted between sedate melodicism and gargantuan guitar riffs. The lyrics were classic Chris Cornell—lines didn't exactly make sense on paper but did within the song."
Larry Flick from
Billboard magazine praised it as "a magnificent pop single", noting that "track's resonant production highlights its moving,
Beatlesque quality without sacrificing band's visceral punch." Ann Powers of
Blender proclaimed that "Cornell's fixation with the Beatles pays off with the hit single 'Black Hole Sun' ". In his weekly UK chart commentary,
James Masterton wrote, "Easily the most commercial single the US band have released to date". Alan Jones from
Music Week gave it four out of five and named it Pick of the Week, adding, "Heavily plugged by
MTV, this single has a fat, full sound, with some psychedclic edges invading the band's usual grungey sound. lt is a light, disciplined and melodic hit."
Jon Pareles of
The New York Times said, "The Beatles' techniques—fuzz-toned low chords, legato lead-guitar hooks and lumpy
Ringo Starr-style drumming...are linked to
Lennon-style melody in 'Black Hole Sun'." Roger Morton from
NME named it "the best moment" from their album, "a melodramatic downer ballad, whose bleakness is offsett by some curious psychedelic guitar figures."
J.D. Considine of
Rolling Stone stated, "With its yearning, Lennonesque melody and watery,
Harrison-style guitar, 'Black Hole Sun' is a wonderful exercise in Beatleisms; trouble is, it's not a very good song, offering more in the way of mood and atmosphere than melodic direction."
Roy Wilkinson from
Select noted "the descending corkscrew melody" of the song. The solo for "Black Hole Sun", performed by Thayil, was ranked number 63 on
Guitar Worlds list of the "100 Greatest Guitar Solos", and number 56 on
Total Guitar's list of the "100 Hottest Guitar Solos". The song was included on
VH1's countdown of the "100 Greatest Songs of the '90s" at number 25. It was also included on VH1's countdown of the "100 Greatest Hard Rock Songs" at number 77. According to
Nielsen Music's year-end report for 2019, "Black Hole Sun" was the ninth most-played song of the decade on mainstream rock radio with 125,000 spins. All of the songs in the top 10 were from the 1990s. In 2017,
Billboard ranked the song number four on their list of the 15 greatest Soundgarden songs, and in 2021,
Kerrang ranked the song number one on their list of the 20 greatest Soundgarden songs. ==Commercial performance==