Commercial performance The Fall-Off debuted at number one on the
Billboard 200. According to estimates from
Luminate reported by
Billboard, the album earned 280,000
album-equivalent units in its first week in the United States, comprising 166.5thousand streaming-equivalent albums from 169.5million on-demand
streams, 113thousand pure album sales, and fivehundred track-equivalent albums. This made for Cole's seventh number-one album on the chart, following
The Off-Season (2021),
KOD (2018),
4 Your Eyez Only (2016),
2014 Forest Hills Drive (2014),
Born Sinner (2013), and
Cole World: The Sideline Story (2011). The album also debuted at number two on the Top Album Sales and Top Streaming Albums charts. Approximately seventy-one per cent (eightythousand) of the pure sales were from
vinyl sales;
The Fall-Off is the first Cole album to be available for purchase on vinyl concurrent with its release on digital platforms and streaming services.
Hits calculated that the album earned 290,861 album-equivalent units in its first sales week in the United States, comprising 175,345 streaming-equivalent albums, 114,927 sales, and 588 track-equivalent albums. In its first day, fourteen of the album's tracks debuted on music streaming service
Spotify's United States Top 50 chart, the highest placement being "Two Six" at number three. The album's first day on streaming service
Apple Music earned Cole eight of the platform's top ten spots. Twenty-one of the album's twenty-four tracks charted on the
Billboard Hot 100 in its debut week, the highest being "Two Six" at number sixteen. In Australia, the album debuted at number seven on the national chart and number one on the chart for hip-hop albums. The
Australian Recording Industry Association noted that it makes Cole's sixth album to reach the top ten, including mixtapes and label compilation albums. In the United Kingdom, the album debuted at number three on the national chart and number six on the chart for hip-hop albums. The
Official Charts Company noted that it makes Cole's fifth album to reach the top ten.
Critical reviews The review aggregator Any Decent Music gave the album a weighted average score of 6.6 out of 10 from nine critic scores.
The Arts Desk Ibi Keita awarded the album four stars out of five, writing that "from the opening moments, the album feels like home" and that Cole "sounds reflective, grounded, and deeply familiar". Keita continued that "there's a calm confidence running through the record", concluding that "
The Fall-Off feels like closure without finality, a reminder of why J. Cole's voice has mattered for so long, and why it still does now".
Clashs Robin Murray awarded the album a score of nine out of ten, writing that it "depicts a soul in love with the art and culture of hip-hop" and that it "propels him and supports him, a place of solace, but also of banishment", stating that the album "feels like his masterpiece, a classic right off the bat". Murray continued that on the first disc, "there's a playful edge to the music" and that it sees "a longing for maturity, and a lingering self-doubt". On the second disc, Murray stated that it contrasts with the first and is "music made specifically for himself". Concluding his review, he wrote that the record "is living testimony to J. Cole's ability to stay the path", describing it as a "masterpiece".
Consequence Kiana Fitzgerald awarded the album a grade of B−, writing that "the strongest parts of the album are when Cole is rapping his ass off over dynamic beats", however, "Cole isn't reacting to the heat of the challenge anymore" and that "he's comfortable", potentially "complacent". Concluding her review, Fitzgerald wrote that "while disc one is all heart-driven bravado, disc two settles into Cole's interpretation of love".
Exclaim!s Vernon Ayiku awarded the album a score of seven out of ten, writing that it is "a technical showcase filled with dense rhyme schemes, melodic versatility, expansive storytelling, and savvy production" and that it is "undoubtedly J. Cole's most complete body of work". However, Ayiku notes that despite the anticipation, "completeness is not the same as transcendence" and that the album "arrives burdened by expectation".
The Guardian AD Carson awarded the album three stars out of five, writing that the album "is full of technical proficiency, raw lyrical skill, citation, interpolation, and sampling", and that it "attempts nothing less than to embody a half-century of hip-hop". Nevertheless, Carson continued writing that the album "seems like an attempt to convey Cole's growth and development, but it's lacking in the emotional depth that comes from real human interactions" and that "he is stronger when examining hip-hop itself", comparing the record to
Ralph Ellison's 1952 novel
Invisible Man. Concluding his review, Carson stated that
The Fall-Off "will stand not as his thesis, but his instruction manual to others: a masterful, deeply knowledgeable but rather brittle read".
The Line of Best Fit William Rosebury awarded the album a score of seven out of ten, writing that despite the hype and anticipation leading up to the record, it "doesn't arrive in the form many would have expected". Roseburry stated that the album is "a love letter to hip-hop music, with Cole incorporating interpolations and samples from classic records across the album", before concluding that the album "succeeds in presenting J. Cole in his final form, freed from the pop-chasing of his early career and the GOAT rapper status he always yearned for".
Pitchfork Benny Sun awarded the album a score of 5.3 out of 10, writing that "quintessential to a J. Cole record,
The Fall-Off offers some insane societal commentary that calls into question how many of his daily comings and goings involve actual people". He continued that "plenty of moments on
The Fall-Off remind of the hunger of his early mixtapes, the purposeful thrills of his 2010s hits, or even the misguided zaniness of
KOD, though none materialize in meaningful doses".
Rolling Stone Mosi Reeves awarded the album three-and-a-half stars out of five, praising the two-disc concept and stating that the "songs link together like chapters in a novel". He wrote that the record "can sometimes feel simpatico and obvious, with mellifluously soulful tones that conjure an air of anxious nostalgia" and that it's a "symptomatic of a persistent quality that haunts his work". He concluded his review stating that "what ultimately animates
The Fall-Off is Jermaine Cole himself" as "he reveals himself as a witty, aggravating, and sometimes enraging presence".
Slant Paul Attard awarded the album two-and-a-half stars out of five and described the record as "a body of work so cautious, so mannerly, and so self-aware that it mistakes adulthood for depth and discipline for risk", continuing that Cole's "egotism reaches new heights on
The Fall-Off, especially since so little here breaks new ground". Concluding his review, Attard wrote that "if visible flop-sweat were all that mattered in art,
The Fall-Off might be as remarkable as it insists it is". == Track listing ==