The song was recorded by
Julie London in 1963 for her album
The End of the World. It was covered by
the Carpenters on their album
Now & Then, released in 1973. During the summer of 1966, Swedish pop group recorded the song. Released as a single in August of that year, it was backed by the song "Whitsand Bay" written by Wallace, based on
the tourist destination he'd often visited. It became a hit on
Tio i Topp, entering the chart on August 6, 1966, at a position of number five. It topped the chart on August 27, staying on the top for a week. It would reach its peak of number two on September 6, being kept off the top by
the Beatles "
Yellow Submarine". scoring a
Svensktoppen hit for seven weeks between 9 October–19 November 1966.
Brilliant recorded a cover version in 1986, produced by Stock Aitken Waterman, the same group that produced Sonia’s later cover. In 1995, American
freestyle girl group
Exposé included a cover of the song on their "Greatest Hits" compilation. A version by
Allison Paige peaked at number 72 on the
Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in May 2000. The
Dot Wiggin Band released a cover of "End of the World" as the last song on their album
Ready! Get! Go! (2013), which
Shintaro Sakamoto opined "actually sounds like the end of the world."
Joe Hisaishi incorporated the song into the final movement of his cantata for soprano, chorus and orchestra, also called
The End of the World, featured on his 2025 album
Joe Hisaishi Conducts. ==Appearances in media==