Demi Lovato is continuing to make surprising waves in the dance music scene.

Just as Beyoncé‘s Grammy-winning album Renaissance took the genre by storm in 2022, Lovato’s new album is now dominating its charts.

It’s Not That Deep has opened at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Dance Albums chart, dated Nov. 8, the magazine reports. It’s the first time the singer-songwriter, 33, has topped this list — so Lovato certainly has reason to celebrate this week.

The album has also debuts at No. 9 on the Billboard 200, becoming the pop star’s ninth top 10. It’s Not That Deep also sits at No. 2 on Top Album Sales and No. 4 on Vinyl Albums, the magazine noted on Tuesday, Nov. 4.

One song from the LP, “Let You Go,” has also debuted at No. 10 on Hot Dance/Pop Songs. It’s the third song from the LP to debut on the chart, following “Fast” (No. 8 peak in August) and “Here All Night” (No. 13 peak in September), according to Billboard.

Before Billboard launched its Hot Dance/Pop Songs chart earlier this year, four Lovato-involved tracks had reached the magazine’s Hot Dance/Electronic Songs list:

  • “No Promises” (Cheat Codes featuring Lovato) in 2017

  • “Instructions” (Jax Jones featuring Lovato and Stefflon Don) in 2017

  • “Solo” (Clean Bandit featuring Lovato) in 2018

  • “OK Not to Be OK” with Marshmello in 2020

Late last month — fresh off her sold-out, one-night-only performance at the Hollywood Palladium — Lovato officially announced her It’s Not That Deep Tour, which will kick off April 8, 2026, in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Produced by Live Nation, the 23-city run will bring Lovato’s dance pop sound across the U.S. and Canada, with stops in New York, Los Angeles, Toronto, Chicago, Nashville and more, before wrapping May 25 in Houston.

“I can’t wait to get back on the road with you and dance to these songs together night after night,” the Grammy-nominated star wrote on Instagram Oct. 27, announcing the news.

Rising pop artist ADÉLA will join as a special guest on select dates.

This story was originally reported by Parade on Nov 5, 2025, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.