The MTV Video Music Awards (commonly abbreviated to VMAs) is an award show presented by MTV to honor the best in the music video medium. The ceremony has often been called the Super Bowl for youth, an acknowledgment of the VMA ceremony's ability to draw millions of youth from teens to 20-somethings each year. By 2001, the VMA had become a coveted award.
| MTV Video Music Awards | |
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| Current: 2025 MTV Video Music Awards | |
The 1983–1984 Video of the Year "Moonman" award | |
| Awarded for | Music videos and pop culture |
| Country | United States |
| Presented by | MTV |
| First award | September 14, 1984 |
| Website | MTV VMA |
| Television/radio coverage | |
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The annual VMA ceremony occurs before the end of summer and held either in late August or mid-September, and broadcast live on CBS. The first VMA ceremony was held in 1984 at New York City's Radio City Music Hall. The ceremonies are normally held in either New York City or Los Angeles. However, the ceremonies have also been hosted in Miami, Las Vegas, Newark, New Jersey, and Elmont, New York.
The statue given to winners is an astronaut on the Moon, one of the earliest representations of MTV, and was colloquially called a "moonman", though it has been called a "moon person" by MTV since the 2017 ceremony. The statue was conceived by Manhattan Design, who were also designers of the original MTV logo, based on the network's debut network identification animation utilizing Apollo 11 mission footage, created by Fred Seibert and produced by Alan Goodman and Buzz Potamkin at Buzzco Associates. The statue is now made by Society Awards, a New York City-based firm. Since the 2006 ceremony, viewers are able to vote for their favorite videos in all general categories.
Taylor Swift is the most awarded solo artist in the history of the VMAs, having won 30 trophies between 2009 and 2024, which includes record-breaking five Video of the Year VMAs ("Bad Blood", "You Need To Calm Down", All Too Well: The Short Film, "Anti-Hero" and "Fortnight").
Notable moments
1980s
1984: at the first MTV Video Music Awards in 1984, Madonna performed her hit "Like a Virgin" wearing a combination bustier/wedding gown, including her trademark "Boy Toy" belt. During the performance, she rolled around on the floor, revealing lace stockings and a garter. Cyndi Lauper spoke in "Exorcist-esque gibberish" to explain the VMA rules right before winning the Best Female video for "Girls Just Want to Have Fun". David Bowie, the Beatles and director Richard Lester were rewarded with the first ever Video Vanguard Awards for their work in pioneering the music video. The Cars' "You Might Think" won the very first video of the year, beating out Michael Jackson's "Thriller" and Herbie Hancock's "Rockit".
1987: At the 1987 MTV Video Music Awards, Peter Gabriel won ten awards, including the Video Vanguard Award and Video of the Year for his video "Sledgehammer", holding the VMA record for most Moonmen in a single night.
1988: At the 1988 MTV Video Music Awards, Michael Jackson appeared for the first time. A pre-recorded live performance of Bad was shown." He was also awarded the Video Vanguard Award, which was later renamed in his honor.
1989: Comedian Andrew Dice Clay appeared at the 1989 Video Music Awards to promote his new movie, The Adventures of Ford Fairlane, earning a "lifetime ban" from the network when he introduced Cher with some of his recently notorious nursery rhymes that contained vulgar language and references. After performing with Tom Petty, Guns N' Roses guitarist Izzy Stradlin was assaulted by Mötley Crüe lead singer Vince Neil, leading to a verbal battle between Neil and Guns N' Roses lead singer Axl Rose.
Jon Bon Jovi and Richie Sambora turned out a stripped-down acoustic performance of the Bon Jovi hits "Livin' on a Prayer" and "Wanted Dead or Alive", and in the process possibly provided the inspirational spark for MTV Unplugged. While the showrunners have stated that it was already in development by the time of the event, they've also credited the pair's performance with influencing the show to go from initially being meant only for "young, up-and-coming artists" into being a simplified showcase for the "big, stadium, electric-arena-type acts".
Paula Abdul was nominated for six awards, picking up four wins. She performed a seven-minute medley of her singles "Straight Up", "Cold Hearted", and "Forever Your Girl".
When Madonna won the Viewer's Choice Award (sponsored by Pepsi-Cola) for her "Like a Prayer" video, she thanked Pepsi-Cola in her acceptance speech "for causing so much controversy". Pepsi-Cola had paid Madonna $5 million to appear in a commercial that would predominantly feature the world premiere of "Like a Prayer"; the commercial, titled "Make a Wish", depicted Madonna drinking Pepsi and watching a home video of her eighth birthday. The tone that the commercial sought to convey sharply contrasted with the music video. When Pepsi executives saw the video, they yanked the advertisement after only two airings, in an attempt to dissociate themselves from Madonna. She also gave one of the most memorable performances of her hit "Express Yourself", as a preview of what would become her Blond Ambition World Tour.
1990s
1990: at the 1990 MTV Video Music Awards, Madonna performed her single "Vogue", which featured Madonna and her backup dancers dressed in an 18th-century French theme, with Madonna bearing great resemblance to Marie Antoinette. The performance consisted of both a dramatic historical reinterpretation of "Vogue" as well as her dramatically becorseted breasts.
1991: during the award show the MTV Video Vanguard Award was renamed to the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award from then on, in honor of his contributions to the culture of music videos by changing them from a promotional tool featuring musicians playing instruments and singing, to a "short film" with a storyline.
A conflict between Poison's Bret Michaels and C.C. DeVille culminated in a fistfight at the 1991 MTV Video Music Awards. DeVille was fired and replaced by Pennsylvanian guitarist Richie Kotzen. Paul Reubens had his first public appearance, during the opening montage, following an arrest for lewd-conduct earlier that year. Taking the stage in costume as Pee-wee Herman, he received a standing ovation, after which he asked the audience, "Heard any good jokes lately?". After his appearance, Van Halen made their television debut, performing "Poundcake". Metallica was another highlight of the performances with "Enter Sandman".
Prince and The New Power Generation performed their song "Gett Off" on a Caligula-esque set, with Prince dressed in a yellow mesh outfit which exposed his buttocks. His trousers were parodied numerous times throughout the following year, on the sketch comedy TV series In Living Color, and even at the following year's VMAs by radio shock jock Howard Stern. It also marked the final TV appearance of Kiss with Eric Carr prior to Carr's death in November 1991.
1992: in the 1992 show, MTV requested Nirvana perform "Smells Like Teen Spirit", while the band itself had indicated it preferred to play new songs "Rape Me" and "tourette's". Network executives continued to push for "Teen Spirit" but finally offered the band a choice to play either "Teen Spirit" or "Lithium", which the band appeared to accept. At the performance, Nirvana began to play, and Kurt Cobain played the first few chords of the song, "Rape Me", much to the horror of MTV execs, before continuing their regular performance of "Lithium". Near the end of the song, frustrated that his amplifier had stopped functioning, bassist Krist Novoselic decided to toss his bass into the air for dramatic effect. He misjudged the landing, and the bass ended up bouncing off of his forehead, forcing him to stumble off the stage in a daze.
Backstage and before the show, Guns N' Roses vocalist Axl Rose challenged Cobain to a fight after he, his wife, Hole lead singer Courtney Love, and Nirvana bandmates Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl egged him on. At the end of Nirvana's performance, while Cobain was trashing the band's equipment, Dave Grohl ran to the microphone and shouted "Hi, Axl! Where's Axl?" repeatedly. Guns N' Roses' video for the ballad "November Rain" won the MTV Video Music Award for best cinematography. During the show, the band performed "November Rain" with singer Elton John. Because of the dispute Rose had with Cobain, moments before the "November Rain" performance, Cobain spat on the keys of what he thought was Axl's piano. Cobain later revealed that he was shocked to see Elton John play on the piano he had spat on. During the commercial break, the Alien 3 Pepsi commercial was shown.
Radio host Howard Stern appeared as Fartman, Stern's radio superhero, wearing a buttocks-exposing costume obviously inspired by Prince's outfit from the previous year. Stern was a presenter for best hard rock/metal performance with actor Luke Perry (after several other celebrities turned him down).
1993: at the 1993 MTV Video Music Awards, Madonna opened the show in a gender-bending performance of her song "Bye Bye Baby", in which Madonna and her two backup singers, dressed in tuxedos and top hats, danced with women in corsets in a choreographed, highly sexual routine.
RuPaul and Milton Berle, who had conflicts backstage, presented an award together. When Berle touched RuPaul's breasts, RuPaul ad-libbed the line "So you used to wear gowns, but now you're wearing diapers."
Rapper Snoop Dogg presented the Best R&B Video award with Dr. Dre and George Clinton. At the time, Snoop was wanted in connection with the week-old drive-by murder of an L.A. gang member.
Janet Jackson closed the show with her performance of "That's the Way Love Goes" & "If".
1994: at the 1994 MTV Video Music Awards on September 8, months after a profanity-laced appearance on the Late Show with David Letterman, Madonna was announced to present the award for Best Video of the Year. She came out, arm-in-arm with an unannounced David Letterman, to a wild ovation. At the microphone, Letterman told her "I'll be in the car. Watch your language", and left.
Recently betrothed couple Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie Presley received a standing ovation as they walked on stage hand-in-hand. After turning to the audience and proclaiming, "And just think, nobody thought this would last", Jackson grabbed Presley and kissed her.
1995: at the 1995 MTV Video Music Awards, Hole perform the song "Violet" from their major-label debut album Live Through This. This was one of the first major televised performances given by frontwoman Courtney Love following the death of her husband Kurt Cobain and the death of her band's bassist Kristen Pfaff in 1994. Before beginning the song, Love dedicated the performance to her husband and different people in the entertainment industry who had recently died: "This is for Kurt, and Kristen, and River, and Joe, and today Joni Abbott, this is for you." Abbott worked in the Talent Relations department at MTV and had recently committed suicide. The song ended with Love throwing her guitar, knocking the microphone stand into the crowd and pushing over speaker-boxes with bandmate Eric Erlandson before exiting the stage. Love also caused a stir when she interrupted a post-ceremony interview with Kurt Loder and Madonna by throwing her make-up compacts at the singer as they broadcast outside the awards venue.
Michael Jackson performed for over 15 minutes to a medley of his main songs, including "Scream", and danced his signature moves, including the robot, moonwalk and the relatively unknown "Bankhead Bounce". While Slash accompanied Jackson and played guitar on "Black or White and the beginning of Billie Jean". This performance was voted by the public as the Best VMA Pop Performance and Most Iconic VMA Performance in 2011 with more than half the votes.
TLC was the big winner of the night won four awards, including "Viewer's Choice", "Best Group Video", and "Video of the Year" (Waterfalls).
1996: at the 1996 MTV Video Music Awards, the four original members of Van Halen received 20-second standing ovation when they made their first public appearance together since their break-up in 1985.
Several weeks later, the public learned that Van Halen would not reunite with Roth. Roth released a statement apologizing to fans, stating that he was an unwitting participant in a publicity stunt to sell more copies of the greatest hits album, Best Of Vol. 1, and that he had been led to believe that he was rejoining Van Halen. The following day, Eddie and Alex Van Halen released a statement, stating that they had been honest with Roth, and never led him to believe that he had been re-hired.[citation needed]
During British band Oasis' performance at the show, lead vocalist Liam Gallagher made rude gestures at brother Noel as he was playing his guitar solo, then spat beer all over the stage before storming off.
Alanis Morissette performed "Your House", a hidden track from her bestseller album "Jagged Little Pill".
The recently reunited Kiss closed the show with a special concert aired from the Brooklyn Bridge.
Tupac Shakur made his final public appearance before his murder.
1997: at the 1997 MTV Video Music Awards, Pat Smear announced that he was leaving Foo Fighters halfway through their performance and presented his replacement, Franz Stahl, who had been a member of the band Scream with Dave Grohl.
The Spice Girls, who won the best dance video award for their music video "Wannabe", wore a black strap on their left arms as a sign of grief because of Diana, Princess of Wales's death four days prior to the event.
While accepting the MTV Video Music Award for Best New Artist Video that year for "Sleep to Dream", Fiona Apple appealed to her audience not to be enamored of celebrity culture. She proclaimed, "this world is bullshit" and quoted Maya Angelou, saying "go with yourself". Though her comments were generally greeted with cheers and applause at the awards ceremony, the media backlash was huge. Some considered her remarks to be hypocritical, however she was unapologetic: "When I have something to say, I'll say it."
Marilyn Manson performed the song "The Beautiful People", as the grand finale, and the video for this song was nominated for "Best Rock Video" and "Best Special Effects", marking one of the most significant performances for the band.
1998: at the 1998 MTV Video Music Awards, during the original broadcast of the show, a commercial faded in the Nine Inch Nails NIN logo on a black screen while playing a combination of music that started as a solo piano piece and morphed into an electronic/industrial beat (which would later found out to be the songs "La Mer" and "Into the Void", which share many melodic components and can be considered variations on a theme) and ended with Trent Reznor screaming "Tried to save myself, but myself kept slipping away" and the word "ninetynine" in the trademark NIN reversed-N font. This was only shown once during the original broadcast, was edited out of all repeats.
Geri Halliwell attended the event, one of her first public appearances since she left the Spice Girls.
At the red carpet, actress Rose McGowan was wearing a see-through dress, no bra, and a thong, while Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston poked fun at their rumored rift by wearing lookalike chocolate brown dresses by Vera Wang. In an attempt to outdo each other, the singers tore off pieces of their dresses to reveal minidresses then staged a faux catfight that left the audience in disbelief. "People thought Whitney and I had some kind of beef", explained Carey.
1999: Lil' Kim showed up at the 1999 MTV Video Music Awards with an entire breast exposed and only a small pasty over the nipple. Kim's outfit became even more controversial later when she appeared on stage with Diana Ross and Mary J. Blige to present the Best Hip-Hop Video award, and Ross reached over, cupped her hand under Kim's exposed breast and jiggled it while Kim laughed.
During the following acceptance speech by the Beastie Boys, group member Ad-Rock addressed the instances of rape and sexual assault that occurred in the crowd at the recent Woodstock 1999 concert event. He pleaded to other musicians in the room to make a change in the way they treat fans at concerts; to pledge to talk with promoters and security to ensure "the safety of all the girls and the women who come to our shows".
Afeni Shakur and Voletta Wallace, the mothers of the recently deceased Tupac Shakur and The Notorious B.I.G., met for the first time at the ceremony.
Britney Spears made her debut appearance on the show, performing her single "...Baby One More Time" and later introducing NSYNC for "Tearin' Up My Heart".
Ricky Martin took the stage of the ceremony to perform his singles "She's All I Ever Had" and "Livin' la Vida Loca".
TLC won Best Group Video for "No Scrubs", receiving a standing ovation from the audience and artists. For the second year in a row, the Backstreet Boys took the Viewer's Choice Award for "I Want It That Way", a song they performed during the broadcast.
Before presenting the final award, a group of drag queens paid tribute to Madonna wearing her most iconic outfits with a medley of her hit songs. Madonna herself then appeared onstage and remarked, "All I have to say is that it takes a real man to fill my shoes." She then introduced Paul McCartney, who presented the Video of the Year to "some guy called Laurence Hill" (Lauryn Hill).
2000s
2000: at the 2000 Video Music Awards, Limp Bizkit won the award for Best Rock Video. As vocalist Fred Durst spoke, Rage Against the Machine bassist Tim Commerford climbed onto the scaffolding of the set. Durst egged Commerford on, saying "Stage dive, dude" and "Take a dive", finally ending his speech with "and [Commerford]'s a pussy 'cause he won't jump". Commerford and his bodyguard were sentenced to a night in jail. RATM vocalist Zack de la Rocha reportedly left the awards after Commerford's stunt. RATM guitarist Tom Morello recalled that Commerford related his plan to the rest of the band before the show, and that both de la Rocha and Morello advised him against it immediately after Bizkit was presented the award.
Eminem performed his two singles "The Real Slim Shady" and "The Way I Am". The performance began with Eminem's single "The Real Slim Shady" which started outside the Radio City Music Hall on 6th Avenue, Manhattan. Eminem continued his performance into the arena and was followed by a hundred Eminem 'clones' wearing white tank tops and baggy jeans with bleached blonde hair.
Napster co-founder Shawn Fanning co-introduced Britney Spears. Fanning wore a Metallica T-shirt, much to the displeasure of Metallica drummer and anti-Napster advocate Lars Ulrich. Britney performed "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" and her newest smash hit "Oops!... I Did It Again", which gained media attention mostly due to Spears's ripping off a tuxedo to reveal nude-colored performance attire. At performance's end, VMA co-host Marlon Wayans proclaimed, "Girl done went from 'The Mickey Mouse Club' to the strip club."
At the end of Christina Aguilera's performance, Durst walked onstage and performed part of his band's song "Livin' It Up" with Aguilera. After eliciting charged reactions from his fans, Durst stated: "I already told you guys before, I did it all for the nookie, man." The feud died weeks later. Aguilera denied Durst's statement, saying Durst "got no nookie".
Aguilera and Spears disproved rumors of a rivalry when they came onstage, holding hands, and introduced Whitney Houston. Houston, who had been targeted by the media for erratic behavior, canceled appearances, drug use rumors and being busted for carrying marijuana at a Hawaii airport just a few months prior, came out to a standing ovation and introduced an award to Eminem with husband Bobby Brown, who was recently let out from jail. Houston revealed more erratic behavior, jumping up and down saying "free" in reference to Brown's recent jail release. Aaliyah would win two MTV Video Music Awards for Best Female Video and Best Video from a Film for "Try Again".[citation needed]
2001: at the 2001 Video Music Awards, Britney Spears performed her single, "I'm a Slave 4 U". while dancing in a very revealing outfit, the performance featured the singer in a cage with a tiger and briefly dancing with a real albino snake on her shoulders. The inclusion of a tiger and a snake in the performance bought a great deal of criticism from PETA.
U2 had been set to perform a medley including "Elevation", "Beautiful Day" and "Stuck in a Moment You Can't Get Out Of". The riser they were performing on lost power and MTV had to cut to several minutes of promos while everything was set up again. They lost power again and finally the band was lowered to the ground and performed without the riser. After the performance, lead singer Bono explained that MTV "forgot to pay the electricity bill".
Michael Jackson made a surprise appearance at the end of NSYNC's performance of "Pop". Surrounded by members of the group, Jackson performed some of his trademark dance moves to Justin Timberlake's beatboxing.
The show paid tribute to the R&B singer/actress Aaliyah, who was supposed to present an award but died two weeks before in a plane crash. U2 paid tribute to punk-rock singer Joey Ramone, who died of lymphoma 4 months before.
2002: in 2002, the VMAs took place on Michael Jackson's birthday, and as a tribute, Britney Spears introduced him saying she "considered him the artist of the millennium". Jackson said, "When I was a little boy growing up in Indiana if someone told me I'd be getting 'the artist of the millennium award,' I'd have never believed it." A year later, at the 2003 VMAs, this was parodied by presenters Fred Durst and Jack Black, with Durst stating that Black was the "funniest man alive".
The Hives and The Vines both performed on the night after the sudden garage rock revival during the year, with rumors spreading around that it was to be 'battle of the bands' performance. Once The Hives performed, singer Howlin' Pelle Almqvist said to the crowd "I know you want us to play more, but that's all the time we have for so you can turn off [your TV] now", just before The Vines came on the bigger stage to perform their hit single "Get Free", ultimately destroying their set after their performance.
Triumph the Insult Comic Dog appeared and had a confrontation with Eminem. Eminem had a confrontation with Moby, who had called the rapper's music misogynistic and homophobic. By that time, there were multiple boos from the crowd. The Best Male Video award was given to Eminem right after the confrontation with Triumph and Moby, and when Eminem went to stage to pick up the award, in the middle of his speech, he challenged Moby to fight if he continued to boo him.
Justin Timberlake made his solo performance debut on the show, performing his single "Like I Love You".
Tionne "T-Boz" Watkins and Rozonda "Chilli" Thomas, the surviving members of the top-selling R&B trio TLC, made their first television appearance since the death of bandmate Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes.
Shakira took the stage of the VMAs to perform her single "Objection (Tango)".
Christina Aguilera shocked the audience by wearing a skimpy outfit and heavy makeup, with a dirty look removing her good-girl image. She was part of an awkward moment at the awards when presenting the Best Male Video Award to Eminem, who had insulted her in 2000.
Canadian artist Avril Lavigne won her first award ever as Best New Artist in a Video, getting the record for the youngest artist so far to win this award at the age of 17. She kicked off the 2002 VMAs with a "Complicated" / "Sk8er Boi" pre-show performance and together with Lisa Marie Presley they gave the award for Best Female Video to Pink who was under the effects of alcohol during her acceptance speech.
Axl Rose unveiled the new lineup of New Guns N' Roses. The band's set was the show's finale, and although the performance was meant to be kept a secret, some New York radio outlets announced the performance earlier in the day. The band played a set consisting of "Welcome to the Jungle", "Madagascar", and "Paradise City".
2003: at the 2003 Video Music Awards, Madonna played a groom kissing her brides, Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera, on stage. The gender role-reversal and lesbian theme instantly made front-page headlines. The three singers performed a medley of her classic hit, "Like a Virgin", and her then latest release, "Hollywood", with a guest rap by Missy Elliott. A quick camera cut to the reaction of Justin Timberlake, who dated Spears until 2002, also gained media attention. The design resembled Madonna's performance of "Like a Virgin" at the 1984 VMAs: the same wedding cake set, wedding dresses and "Boy Toy" belt worn by Madonna 19 years ago now adorned Aguilera and Spears.
Beyoncé opened her performance by descending upside down from the rafters at Radio City Music Hall. Knowles performed "Baby Boy" as she was gently lowered to the stage, dressed in harem pants. She was later joined by Jay-Z as they performed their duet "Crazy in Love". The performance marked Knowles' solo debut.
2004: the 2004 MTV Video Music Awards were held at the American Airlines Arena in Miami, Florida. This was the first time the awards show was held outside of New York City and Los Angeles. It was the first video music awards to not have a host.
2005: at the 2005 show, Green Day returned, taking home the Best Rock Video, Best Group Video, and Video of the Year Moonmen for "Boulevard of Broken Dreams", which they performed during the broadcast. They also took the Viewer's Choice award for "American Idiot".
The 2005 VMAs were the first to have a performance in Spanish, when Shakira performed her single "La Tortura" with Alejandro Sanz. It was also the first time that Spanish-language videos were nominated at the awards.
Also at the show, while introducing the reggaeton spot, Fat Joe made a disparaging comment about G-Unit: "I'd like to tell the people home I feel so safe tonight with all this police protection courtesy of G-Unit...". Later in the show, after G-Unit's performance, 50 Cent directed profanities at Fat Joe which were edited out before the shows airing although some broadcasts played the uncensored version of the show. Reggaeton artists Daddy Yankee, Tego Calderón and Don Omar performed.
Actress Eva Longoria caused a stir when she appeared barely dressed to introduce Mariah Carey. Gwen Stefani and Snoop Dogg won best dressed female and male and received prizes to donate to a charity of their choice.
Kelly Clarkson performed a high energy version of her song "Since U Been Gone" barefoot wearing a graphic belly top and capri pants. Clarkson moved through the crowd during the performance, which culminated in the singer getting sprayed with water. By the end of the song, she and a portion of the audience were soaking wet. R. Kelly performed his rap opera, "Trapped in the Closet".
Animated duo Beavis and Butt-head appeared in several Viewer's Choice award skits, saying to "Vote to put Beavis and Butt-head back on MTV!". Rather belatedly, the TV show returned to MTV in 2011.
2006: Justin Timberlake opened the 2006 Video Music Awards performing his singles "My Love" and "SexyBack". The awards were distributed evenly widespread all genres, as hip-hop, pop and rock artists alike all won Moonmen. 2006 was also the first time that viewers voted for all the performer's categories (Video of the Year, Best Male Video, Best Group Video, among others, except professional categories).
When Panic! at the Disco won Video of the Year for "I Write Sins Not Tragedies", a man calling himself Sixx jumped onstage claiming that MTV had denied him his own TV show. Hosted by Jack Black, there were also performances by Shakira with Wyclef Jean, Beyoncé, Christina Aguilera and The Killers.
2007: the 2007 Video Music Awards was opened by Britney Spears performing her comeback single "Gimme More". To many, Spears failed to live up to the pre-show hype. She wore black sequined lingerie and put in less energy than her previous performances. The performance was called "career crippling".
Kid Rock and Tommy Lee were involved in an altercation during Alicia Keys's performance. Lee was sitting with magician Criss Angel when the two went to visit Diddy, who was sitting close to Kid Rock. Kid Rock allegedly punched Tommy Lee in the face. The two were broken up, and both were escorted from the resort. Angel was removed a short time later.
2008: the 2008 Video Music Awards were opened by Britney Spears which welcomed everybody to the 25-year anniversary of the Video Music Awards. Barbadian singer Rihanna opened the show with her song "Disturbia" in a very revealing black leather outfit. After 16 nominations, Britney Spears finally won her first VMA, taking Best Female Video, Best Pop Video, and Video of the Year for "Piece of Me", considered as Spears' comeback.[citation needed]
Host Russell Brand commented on Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama, begging the audience to vote for him. Brand called President George W. Bush a "retarded cowboy" and claimed Bush "wouldn't be trusted with a pair of scissors in Britain".
Russell Brand also made comments on the Jonas Brothers for wearing purity rings. Brand later faced criticism for his swipes at the trio. He confirmed his apology at the MTV Video Music Awards 2009 by saying "I upset the Jonas Brothers last year, I had to say sorry to them and they forgave me. They had to, they're Christians." During her introduction of T.I. and Rihanna's performance, Jordin Sparks, who also wears a purity ring, defended the boy-band by saying "It's not bad to wear a promise ring because not everybody, guy or girl, wants to be a slut." Sparks was in turn criticized for implying that those who do not wear purity rings or do not abstain are promiscuous.
2009: at the 2009 Video Music Awards, singer-songwriter Taylor Swift won Best Female video for "You Belong with Me". During her acceptance speech, rapper Kanye West unexpectedly showed up on stage. Taking the microphone from Swift, he announced "Yo Taylor, I'm really happy for you, and Imma let you finish, but Beyoncé had one of the best videos of all time. One of the best videos of all time!". MTV cut away from the stage (showing Beyoncé with a shocked and disapproved look) after West gave the microphone back to Swift and giving the middle finger to the audience as they started booing him off stage, and so Swift did not finish her speech. West was removed for the rest of the show. However, when Beyoncé won Video of the Year for "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)", she called Swift back on stage to "have her moment" (finishing her speech from winning Best Female Video). In an off-the-record portion of an interview the following day, President Barack Obama called West a "jackass" for his antics. During a post-interview, Jay-Z admitted West was wrong to go on stage, but he thought people were overreacting to the incident.
Madonna opened the show talking about her experiences with Michael Jackson. After her speech, a Michael Jackson tribute commenced, including Janet Jackson performing the duet "Scream". The show closed with a sneak preview of Michael Jackson's This Is It movie.
At the show's red carpet, Colombian singer Shakira and American singer Pink attended with the same dress. Both singers took it humorously and posed together for the paparazzi.
Lady Gaga later performed her song "Paparazzi" and shocked the audience when she appeared to bleed out on stage. It was actually a contraption in her outfit. Beyoncé performed her song "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)" with over two dozen female dancers dancing with her. Pink performed her single "Sober" while doing a trapeze act during the entire performance while singing live.
Rapper Lil Mama jumped on stage as Jay-Z and Alicia Keys performed "Empire State of Mind". Lil Mama later apologized. During an interview with New York Radio DJ Angie Martinez, Jay-Z said that he thought the unrehearsed move was something similar to the West and Swift incident.
Beyoncé, Lady Gaga and Green Day were the big winners of the night, with three awards each.
2010s
2010: at the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards, Taylor Swift performed her song "Innocent", while Kanye West performed "Runaway" with Pusha T giving a stellar performance on the MPC2000. Eminem, who performed at the show, did not receive his awards in person, as he had to leave immediately to perform with Jay Z at The Home & Home Tour in New York City the next day. Additionally, will.i.am's "blackface" outfit sparked controversy among African-Americans. Florence + the Machine performed "Dog Days Are Over".
Lady Gaga won eight awards, including Video of the Year, Best Female Video, and Best Pop Video for "Bad Romance"; she also won Best Collaboration for "Telephone" with Beyoncé. Upon accepting her Video of the Year award, Gaga wore a dress made entirely of raw meat, which drew criticism from PETA. While accepting her Video of the Year award, Lady Gaga announced the title of her next album, Born This Way, and sang the chorus of its title track and lead single. Justin Bieber won Best New Artist, making him the second youngest Canada-born artist to ever win a VMA (first being Avril Lavigne in 2002).
Overall, the show grabbed 11.4 million viewers—the largest audience for an MTV Video Music Awards since 2002, and until 2011's new record.
2011: the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards returned to the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles, California. In the entire history of the show, this was the third time no host was scheduled, although Kevin Hart, who would receive the position a year later, delivered an opening monologue.
Lady Gaga opened the show dressed as her alter ego Joe Calderone, delivering a monologue and then performing her single "You and I" from her album Born This Way. She was joined on stage by Queen band member and guitarist Brian May.
The tribute to Britney Spears included performances by young talents, who danced to various hit singles by Spears including "...Baby One More Time" and "Till the World Ends". After the tribute, Lady Gaga went onstage to present Spears the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award. While accepting her award she and Gaga (dressed as her alter ego Joe Calderone) teased a kiss. Spears rejected the exchange saying, "I've done that already", referring to her liplock with Madonna at the 2003 show.
During Kanye West and Jay Z's surprise performance of "Otis", a man attempted to rush the stage but was quickly taken off by security.
Katy Perry and Kanye West won the Award for Best Video for a Collaborative Single. As they went onstage to receive the award, Perry made a reference to West's incident with Taylor Swift two years back. This was the first award Perry won in four years of being nominated.
Prior to her performance, Beyoncé announced on the red carpet that she and husband/rapper Jay Z were expecting a child. Straight after Beyoncé finished performing her song "Love on Top", she also revealed again that she was pregnant by showing off her baby bump and rubbing it. That evening, Beyoncé set the record for the most mentions on Twitter per second (with 8,868) and helped this year's VMAs become the most-watched broadcast in MTV history, pulling in 12.4 million viewers.
A tribute to late singer Amy Winehouse also took place; Russell Brand delivered a monologue on his thoughts on her, after which Tony Bennett previewed his collaboration with her for his album Duets II. Afterwards, Bruno Mars performed "Valerie" in her honor.
Katy Perry won three awards including Video of the Year for "Firework", and Lady Gaga won two awards, including the new category Best Video With a Message for "Born This Way".
2012: The 2012 MTV Video Music Awards aired live from the Staples Center in Los Angeles, California on September 6, 2012. British boy band One Direction was the big winner of the night receiving Best New Artist, Best Pop Video, and Most Share Worthy Video. Rihanna won the Video of the Year Award for "We Found Love".
2013: For the 2013 MTV Video Music Awards, MTV redesigned its moonman statue for one year only due to the ceremony's being held in Brooklyn for the first time. Brooklyn-based artist KAWS used Michelin Man as inspiration to redesign the image of the renowned MTV moonman. Barclays Center, which served as the venue for the 2013 show, was decorated also by KAWS, themed around the redesigned moonman. The 2013 VMAs also marked the fourth time in the award show's history that a host had not been appointed for the annual event. Lady Gaga opened the ceremony, performing her single "Applause". During the performance, Gaga changed three times on stage and gave a tribute to her past eras (The Fame, The Fame Monster and Born This Way). At the end, Gaga came on stage wearing nothing but a seashell bikini.
Miley Cyrus' performance of her song "We Can't Stop" featured the former Disney star entering the stage through a giant teddy bear wearing a one-piece bodice with a teddy bear design on it. The singer performed with a group of female backup dancers dressed as giant bears before singer Robin Thicke joins with Cyrus on stage to perform his single "Blurred Lines". Cyrus then stripped down to a nude-colored lingerie and proceeded to perform her signature twerking dance moves, simulating sex with Thicke and grabbing his crotch with a giant foam finger. The unimpressed reactions of several celebrity audience members, including Rihanna and members of One Direction, also gained attention in the media.
Justin Timberlake's "Mirrors" won Video of the Year, making him the first male solo artist to win this category since Eminem in 2002 with "Without Me". Timberlake also became the second artist to be honored with the Video Vanguard Award and win Video of the Year in the same night, after Peter Gabriel did it in 1987. To celebrate his Video Vanguard Award, Timberlake performed a 15-minute medley performance, which included a mini-reunion with his former band *NSYNC. The set list of the most watched performance of the night included hit singles from his first four solo albums, such as "Cry Me a River", "SexyBack" and "Suit & Tie".
2014: the 2014 show was held at The Forum in Inglewood, California. Miley Cyrus won Video of the Year for "Wrecking Ball" and got a young homeless man named Jesse to accept the award on her behalf. His speech was a call-to-action to help raise awareness to the homeless youth of America. Ariana Grande, Nicki Minaj and Jessie J opened the show. Beyoncé closed the show by performing a 16-minute medley of songs from her self-titled fifth studio album. After the performance, her husband Jay Z and daughter Blue Ivy presented the Video Vanguard Award to her.
2015: the 2015 show was hosted by Miley Cyrus. Fashion designer Jeremy Scott redesigned the year's "moonman", marking the second time that the statue had been transformed. Taylor Swift won four awards, including Video of the Year for "Bad Blood". She presented the Video Vanguard Award to Kanye West, who ended his acceptance speech by claiming that he would run for president in 2020.
Nicki Minaj ended her acceptance speech for Best Hip-Hop Video by passing the show back to Cyrus, saying: "And now, back to this bitch who had a lot to say about me the other day in the press: Miley, What's good?". Minaj was referring to Cyrus' comments about how she handled "Anaconda" being snubbed for a Video of the Year nomination. Cyrus appeared stunned by Minaj's remarks and replied, "We're all in this industry. We all do interviews and we all know how they manipulate shit. Nicki, congratu-fuckin-lations." The camera then cut back to Minaj who seemed to mouth back the word "bitch". Cyrus closed the show by performing along with a group of drag queens who participated on RuPaul's Drag Race and surprisingly released her fifth studio album Miley Cyrus and Her Dead Petz for free.
2016: the 2016 show was held at the Madison Square Garden in Manhattan. Rihanna performed four times during the show, including opening and closing the ceremony. After her final performance, Rihanna was presented the Video Vanguard Award by Drake, who declared, "She's someone I've been in love with since I was 22 years old." While accepting her award, Drake leaned in for a kiss that Rihanna dodged. Britney Spears returned to perform at the VMAs for the first time since her heavily criticized performance at the 2007 show. Kanye West gave a seven-minute long speech covering different topics, including his feud with Taylor Swift.
Beyoncé performed a 16-minute medley of her album Lemonade and won eight awards, including Video of the Year for "Formation". She became the most awarded artist in VMA history with 24 moonmen, surpassing Madonna's previous record of 20. The telecast saw a drop in audience for third year in a row.
2017: the 2017 show was hosted by Katy Perry. Kendrick Lamar won six awards, including Video of the Year for "Humble", becoming the first artist to have won the award for a video he co-directed, while Pink was honored with the Video Vanguard Award. Jared Leto paid tribute to Chester Bennington and Chris Cornell, who both died over the past three months. The music video for Taylor Swift's song "Look What You Made Me Do" premiered during the broadcast. Compared to the previous year, viewership was down from 6.5 million to 5.4 million viewers, making it the lowest viewed VMAs since Nielsen started measuring the show in 1994.
At the start of Fifth Harmony's performance there were five silhouettes; one of them fell off the stage, referencing former group member Camila Cabello leaving the group the previous year.
Logic performed his song "1-800-273-8255" along with Alessia Cara and Khalid. Their stage was outlined with survivors of suicide loss and attempts, who wore T-shirts that had the phone number on the front and the phrase "You Are Not Alone" written on the back. During their performance, Logic gave a speech about thanking the audience for giving him a platform to talk about the issues "that mainstream media doesn't want to talk about: mental health, anxiety, suicide, depression". He further added, "I don't give a damn if you're black, white, or any color in between. I don't care if you're Christian, you're Muslim, you're gay, you're straight – I am here to fight for your equality, because I believe that we are all born equal, but we are not treated equally and that is why we must fight." Following the performance, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline experienced a 50% increase in calls.
2018: Cardi B, the most nominated artist of the night, opened the 2018 show with a brief speech, holding a VMA like a baby. While receiving one of her awards, Cardi B stated, "all the love.. it's genuine, it's beautiful, and that's something that God give me that you can't buy. B-tch." Camila Cabello won Video of the Year for "Havana" and Jennifer Lopez received the Vanguard Award. With Maluma among the performers as well, it marked the VMAs with the most Latin music artists present at the ceremony since the 2005 show.
Before introducing Cabello's category, Madonna gave a tribute to the late Aretha Franklin. Most of the speech said the early origins of Madonna's career and was only tangentially Franklin-related, which made critics describe the "bizarre" tribute as a "lengthy" anecdote about herself that involved Franklin's music. Afterwards, Madonna explained that she was there to give the Video of the Year award as asked by MTV and to speak about some experience in her career with some connection with Aretha, not to make any kind of tribute.
The viewership of the 2018 MTV Video Music Awards was down 9% overall and 15% in the important 18- to 49-year-old demographic group. The total viewership was 4.8 million.
2019: the 2019 show was held at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. This was the first time the VMAs took place at the venue and in the state of New Jersey (it became the fifth state to host the show after New York, California, Florida and Nevada).
The show was hosted by Sebastian Maniscalco. Taylor Swift won three awards, including Video of the Year for "You Need to Calm Down". She became the second artist and first female artist to have won the award for a video she co-directed, and the fourth artist to win the category twice overall. Lil Nas X and Billy Ray Cyrus's "Old Town Road" won two awards, including Song of the Year. Missy Elliott received the Vanguard Award introduced by Cardi B and performed a medley. The performance was heavily choreographed and the set pieces alluded to her music videos "The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly)", "Get Ur Freak On", and "Work It". Shawn Mendes & Camila Cabello performed their hit single "Señorita" for the first time ever in a performance characterized for its kissing tension. Lizzo performed a set featuring her singles, "Truth Hurts" and "Good as Hell". During the performance she gave a short self-empowering monologue, and featured a figurative shadow of an oversized CGI rear end. Normani gave a performance of her song "Motivation", that featured her doing intense gymnastic styled choreography that echoed the music video. Rosalía became the first lead Spanish act to ever perform at the VMAs, performing a medley of "A Ningún Hombre", "Yo x Ti, Tu x Mi" (alongside Ozuna), and "Aute Cuture". She also won Best Latin and Best Choreography for "Con Altura", becoming the first ever Spanish act to win a VMA, for which she was congratulated by many personalities including Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.
Marc Jacobs received the inaugural MTV Fashion Trailblazer Award.
2020s
2020: The 2020 MTV Video Music Awards were held on August 30, 2020. The show was originally scheduled to take place at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York City, but was moved outdoors because of security concerns caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Instead, the 37th annual ceremony would "highlight the boroughs in an exciting show and return to Barclays Center in 2021". For the first time in its history the VMAs were simulcast on over-the-air television on The CW, which is jointly owned by MTV parent company ViacomCBS and AT&T parent company WarnerMedia.
Keke Palmer hosted the show from a VR model of the infamous Manhattan staple, Empire State Building. The Weeknd won Video of the Year for "Blinding Lights", which he also performed as the show's opener. During his speech he showed support for the Black Lives Matter movement and demanded justice for Breonna Taylor and Jacob Blake.
Lady Gaga received the first-ever (and only thus far as of 2024) Tricon Award, introduced by Bella Hadid. After giving her speech, Gaga performed a medley of her songs, including "Chromatica II"/"911", "Stupid Love" and "Rain on Me", the latter performed with Ariana Grande. Grande also won four awards, including Song of the Year and Best Collaboration.
The show was dedicated to actor Chadwick Boseman, who died less than 48 hours before the ceremony due to colon cancer.
2021: The 2021 MTV Video Music Awards were held September 12, 2021, at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York City, for the first time in eight years. The award show also served as a celebration of MTV's 40th anniversary. An opening monologue was delivered by Madonna. Artist Kehinde Wiley redesigned the year's moonperson trophy, marking the third time that the statue had been transformed and the first from an artist of African-American descent.
Kim Petras performed her single "Future Starts Now", becoming the first openly transgender singer to perform at the VMAs.
Lil Nas X won three awards for "Montero (Call Me By Your Name)", including Video of the Year and Best Direction. He became the second artist and first LGBTQ+ artist to win both categories for a video they co-directed. He jokingly thanked the gay agenda in his acceptance speech.
Olivia Rodrigo and Justin Bieber also received awards in big categories, winning Song of the Year and Artist of the Year respectively. BTS won three awards, winning Group of the Year for the third consecutive time, in addition to Best K-Pop and Song of Summer for "Butter".
2022: Taylor Swift announced the release of her tenth studio album Midnights during her Video of the Year award acceptance speech. Swift also became the first ever artist to win Video of the Year three times.
Nicki Minaj won the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard award that night and performed a 9-minute medley of her hits including "Anaconda," "Super Bass", "Monster", "Beez in the Trap", and her newest hit "Super Freaky Girl" along with other songs. The award was presented by five members of her fan club the Barbz. In her acceptance speech, Minaj shouted out multiple people who had inspired her and people who have given her big opportunities early in her career including Madonna, Eminem, Britney Spears, Lil Wayne, Drake, Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, Rihanna, and more who had help boost the popularity of her 2011 hit, "Super Bass". Minaj also said that she wished musicians Whitney Houston and Michael Jackson were there to witness her. She also paid respects to her father, Robert Maraj, who died in a tragic hit-and-run accident in 2021. She said she wished people took mental health more seriously. Minaj thanked the Barbz, told the audience about her son, nicknamed Papa Bear, and announced her first greatest hits album, Queen Radio Vol. 1.
There were three co-hosts in the show, LL Cool J, Minaj, and Jack Harlow.
Harlow opened the show with a performance of his single, "First Class". The performance took place on an airplane with Harlow acting as an attendant. Several celebrities were seated in the plane including Lil Nas X, Saucy Santana, Avril Lavigne, and more. The plane "landed" at the award show and mocked a red carpet interview, with Harlow saying "Ladies and Gentlemen, Fergie!". Fergie had come out onstage to perform her 2007 hit "Glamorous" which "First Class" samples, marking her first televised performance since her controversial performance of "The Star-Spangled Banner" at the 2018 NBA All Star Game. The performance ended with Fergie and Harlow hugging.
Anitta becomes the first Brazilian singer to win a category at the MTV Video Music Awards.
2023: NSYNC reunited for the first time in 10 years at the ceremony, to present the award for Best Pop, which was to Taylor Swift's "Anti-Hero". Swift acknowledged that she still has the 'N Sync dolls, referencing the "It's Gonna Be Me" music video, and they gave her friendship bracelets.
Shakira was awarded with the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award, performing a medley of her hits. She became the first South-American born artist to receive the award. Later, Shakira and Karol G won the Best Collaboration award, for "TQG", making the first time a Spanish-language video and a Latin female collaboration won the award.
Taylor Swift won Video of the Year for a second consecutive year for "Anti-Hero", making her the artist with the most wins (four) in this category.
2024: The ceremony was originally scheduled to take place on September 10, 2024, but was pushed back by a day to avoid an overlap with the presidential debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris.
Taylor Swift won seven awards, including Video of the Year and Artist of the Year, breaking the record for most awards won overall, with thirty wins since 2009. Her Video of the Year win for "Fortnight" extended her record for the most wins and most consecutive wins in this category, with five wins and three years respectively.
2025: The 2025 Video Music Awards were held at the UBS Arena in Elmont, New York, on September 7, 2025. It was broadcast for the first time on CBS and available to stream on Paramount+ with a simulcast on MTV. The show was hosted by rapper and actor LL Cool J.
Lady Gaga was the most nominated and awarded artist, winning four trophies out of twelve nominations. Ariana Grande's Brighter Days Ahead was crowned Video of the Year. Mariah Carey was honored with the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award, presented by Grande. Two new special awards were given out; Busta Rhymes received the Rock the Bells Visionary, and Ricky Martin received the Latin Icon. The ceremony saw a 42% increase in viewership compared to the previous edition, its highest ratings in 6 years.
List of ceremonies
| Year | Date | Venue | Host city | Host(s) | Video of the Year Winner | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1984 | September 14 | Radio City Music Hall | New York City | Dan Aykroyd and Bette Midler | "You Might Think" by The Cars (Directed by Jeff Stein and Charlex) | |
| 1985 | September 13 | Eddie Murphy | "The Boys of Summer" by Don Henley (Directed by Jean-Baptiste Mondino) | |||
| 1986 | September 5 | The Palladium, Universal Amphitheatre | New York City, Los Angeles | MTV VJs: "Downtown" Julie Brown, Mark Goodman, Alan Hunter, Martha Quinn and Dweezil Zappa | "Money for Nothing" by Dire Straits (Directed by Steve Barron) | |
| 1987 | September 11 | Universal Amphitheatre | Los Angeles | MTV VJs: "Downtown" Julie Brown, Carolyne Heldman, Dweezil Zappa and Kevin Seal | "Sledgehammer" by Peter Gabriel (Directed by Stephen R. Johnson) | |
| 1988 | September 7 | Arsenio Hall | "Need You Tonight" / "Mediate" by INXS (Directed by Richard Lowenstein) | |||
| 1989 | September 6 | "This Note's for You" by Neil Young (Directed by Julien Temple) | ||||
| 1990 | September 6 | "Nothing Compares 2 U" by Sinéad O'Connor (Directed by John Maybury) | ||||
| 1991 | September 5 | "Losing My Religion" by R.E.M. (Directed by Tarsem Singh) | ||||
| 1992 | September 9 | UCLA's Pauley Pavilion | Dana Carvey | "Right Now" by Van Halen (Directed by Mark Fenske) | ||
| 1993 | September 2 | Universal Amphitheatre | Christian Slater | "Jeremy" by Pearl Jam (Directed by Mark Pellington) | ||
| 1994 | September 8 | Radio City Music Hall | New York City | Roseanne Barr | "Cryin'" by Aerosmith (Directed by Marty Callner) | |
| 1995 | September 7 | Dennis Miller | "Waterfalls" by TLC (Directed by F. Gary Gray) | |||
| 1996 | September 4 | "Tonight, Tonight" by The Smashing Pumpkins (Directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris) | ||||
| 1997 | September 4 | Chris Rock | "Virtual Insanity" by Jamiroquai (Directed by Jonathan Glazer) | |||
| 1998 | September 10 | Universal Amphitheatre | Los Angeles | Ben Stiller | "Ray of Light" by Madonna (Directed by Jonas Åkerlund) | |
| 1999 | September 9 | Metropolitan Opera House | New York City | Chris Rock | "Doo Wop (That Thing)" by Lauryn Hill (Directed by Big TV!) | |
| 2000 | September 7 | Radio City Music Hall | Marlon Wayans and Shawn Wayans | "The Real Slim Shady" by Eminem (Directed by Dr. Dre and Philip Atwell) | ||
| 2001 | September 6 | Metropolitan Opera House | Jamie Foxx | "Lady Marmalade" by Christina Aguilera, Lil' Kim, Mýa and P!nk featuring Missy Elliott (Directed by Paul Hunter) | ||
| 2002 | August 29 | Radio City Music Hall | Jimmy Fallon | "Without Me" by Eminem (Directed by Joseph Kahn) | ||
| 2003 | August 28 | Chris Rock | "Work It" by Missy Elliott (Directed by Dave Meyers) | |||
| 2004 | August 29 | American Airlines Arena | Miami | N/a | "Hey Ya!" by OutKast (Directed by Bryan Barber) | |
| 2005 | August 28 | Diddy | "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" by Green Day (Directed by Samuel Bayer) | |||
| 2006 | August 31 | Radio City Music Hall | New York City | Jack Black | "I Write Sins Not Tragedies" by Panic! At The Disco (Directed by Shane Drake) | |
| 2007 | September 9 | Palms Casino Resort | Las Vegas | N/a | "Umbrella" by Rihanna featuring Jay-Z (Directed by Chris Applebaum) | |
| 2008 | September 7 | Paramount Studios | Los Angeles | Russell Brand | "Piece of Me" by Britney Spears (Directed by Wayne Isham) | |
| 2009 | September 13 | Radio City Music Hall | New York City | "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)" by Beyoncé (Directed by Jake Nava) | ||
| 2010 | September 12 | Nokia Theatre | Los Angeles | Chelsea Handler | "Bad Romance" by Lady Gaga (Directed by Francis Lawrence) | |
| 2011 | August 28 | N/a | "Firework" by Katy Perry (Directed by Dave Meyers) | |||
| 2012 | September 6 | Staples Center | Kevin Hart | "We Found Love" by Rihanna featuring Calvin Harris (Directed by Melina Matsoukas) | ||
| 2013 | August 25 | Barclays Center | New York City | N/a | "Mirrors" by Justin Timberlake (Directed by Floria Sigismondi) | |
| 2014 | August 24 | The Forum | Inglewood, California | "Wrecking Ball" by Miley Cyrus (Directed by Terry Richardson) | ||
| 2015 | August 30 | Microsoft Theater | Los Angeles | Miley Cyrus | "Bad Blood" by Taylor Swift featuring Kendrick Lamar (Directed by Joseph Kahn) | |
| 2016 | August 28 | Madison Square Garden | New York City | N/a | "Formation" by Beyoncé (Directed by Melina Matsoukas) | |
| 2017 | August 27 | The Forum | Inglewood, California | Katy Perry | "HUMBLE." by Kendrick Lamar (Directed by Dave Meyers and The Little Homies) | |
| 2018 | August 20 | Radio City Music Hall | New York City | N/a | "Havana" by Camila Cabello featuring Young Thug (Directed by Dave Meyers) | |
| 2019 | August 26 | Prudential Center | Newark, New Jersey | Sebastian Maniscalco | "You Need to Calm Down" by Taylor Swift (Directed by Taylor Swift and Drew Kirsch) | |
| 2020 | August 30 | One Astor Plaza | New York City | Keke Palmer | "Blinding Lights" by The Weeknd (Directed by Anton Tammi) | |
| 2021 | September 12 | Barclays Center | Doja Cat | "Montero (Call Me by Your Name)" by Lil Nas X (Directed by Lil Nas X and Tanu Muino) | ||
| 2022 | August 28 | Prudential Center | Newark, New Jersey | Jack Harlow, LL Cool J and Nicki Minaj | All Too Well: The Short Film by Taylor Swift (Directed by Taylor Swift) | |
| 2023 | September 12 | Nicki Minaj | "Anti-Hero" by Taylor Swift (Directed by Taylor Swift) | |||
| 2024 | September 11 | UBS Arena | Elmont, New York | Megan Thee Stallion | "Fortnight" by Taylor Swift featuring Post Malone (Directed by Taylor Swift) | |
| 2025 | September 7 | LL Cool J | Brighter Days Ahead by Ariana Grande (Directed by Christian Breslauer) |
Award categories
Votable categories
Winners of the following categories are chosen by fan votes through a voting process.
- Video of the Year
- Artist of the Year
- Song of the Year
- Best New Artist (awarded as Best New Artist in a Video from 1984 to 2006, Artist to Watch from 2013 to 2015, and Push Best New Artist in 2020)
- Push Performance of the Year
- Best Group (awarded as Best Group Video from 1984 to 2007)
- Best Collaboration (awarded as Most Earthshattering Collaboration in 2007)
- Best Pop (awarded as Best Pop Video from 1999 to 2016)
- Best Rock (awarded as Best Heavy Metal Video in 1989, Best Heavy Metal/Hard Rock Video from 1990 to 1995, Best Hard Rock Video in 1996, and Best Rock Video from 1997 to 2016)
- Best Hip-Hop (awarded as Best Hip-Hop Video from 1999 to 2016)
- Best R&B (awarded as Best R&B Video from 1993 to 2006)
- Best Alternative (awarded as Best Alternative Video from 1991 to 1998)
- Best Latin (awarded as Best Latino Artist from 2010 to 2013)
- Best K-Pop
- Video for Good (awarded as Best Video with a Message from 2011 to 2012, Best Video with a Social Message from 2013 to 2015, Best Fight Against the System in 2017, and Video with a Message in 2018)
- Best Long Form Video (awarded as Breakthrough Long Form Video in 2016)
- Song of Summer
- Best Album
- Best Afrobeats
- Best Pop Artist
- Best Country (awarded as the CMT Music Awards Video of the Year from 2002 to 2024)
Professional categories
Winners of the following categories are chosen by members of the music industry.
- Best Direction
- Best Choreography
- Best Visual Effects (awarded as Best Special Effects from 1984 to 2011)
- Best Art Direction
- Best Editing
- Best Cinematography
Special Awards
The following awards have special significance and are not necessarily awarded annually.
- Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award (awarded as the Video Vanguard Award from 1984 to 1990, 2006, awarded as the Lifetime Achievement an Award in 1994 and 2003)
- Global Icon Award was introduced in 2021 and it is awarded to bands and musicians with “an unparalleled career and continued influence” and has achieved “global success in music and beyond.”
- Foo Fighters (2021)
- Red Hot Chilli Peppers (2022)
- P Diddy (2023)
Past award categories
- Special Recognition Award (1984–1986)
- Best Overall Performance in a Video (1984–1987)
- Most Experimental Video (1984–1987; replaced by Breakthrough Video)
- Best Concept Video (1984–1988)
- Best Stage Performance in a Video (1984–1989)
- Best Post-Modern Video (1989–1990; replaced by Best Alternative Video)
- Best Artist Website (1999)
- Best Video from a Film (1987–2003)
- International Viewer's Choice (1989–2003; awards for individual regions were created and eliminated in different years)
- Best Rap Video (1989–2006)
- MTV2 Award (2001–2006)
- Viewer's Choice (1984–2006)
- Best Video Game Soundtrack (2004–2006)
- Best Video Game Score (2006)
- Ringtone of the Year (2006)
- Quadruple Threat of the Year (2007)
- Monster Single of the Year (2007)
- Best UK Video (2008)
- Best Video (That Should Have Won a Moonman) (2009)
- Breakthrough Video (1988–2005, 2009–2010)
- Most Share-Worthy Video (2012)
- Best Latino Artist (2010–2013)
- Best Lyric Video (2014)
- Best Male Video (1984–2016; replaced by Artist of the Year)
- Best Female Video (1984–2016; replaced by Artist of the Year)
- Push Artist of the Year (2018–2019; merged with Best New Artist in 2020)
- Best Power Anthem (2019)
- Best Dance (1989–2019; awarded as Best Dance Video from 1989 to 2006, Best Dancing in a Video in 2008, Best Dance Music Video in 2010, Best Electronic Dance Music Video in 2012, MTV Clubland Award in 2014, Best Electronic Video in 2016)
- MTV Fashion Trailbazer Award (2019)
- Best Music Video from Home (2020)
- Best Quarantine Performance (2020)
- Everyday Heroes: Frontline Medical Workers (2020)
- MTV Tricon Award (2020)
- VMAs Most Iconic Performance (2024)
- Best Trending Video (2024)
Reception
The MTV Video Music Awards have been described as a prominent event in the mainstream music industry since its inauguration. However, some publications such as The Washington Post and HuffPost opined that the stature of the ceremony had declined by 2019. HuffPost cited reasons such as a lack of interest (declining attendances and viewership: in 2019 ratings hit an all-time low for the third straight year), lack of musical diversity, lack of celebrity, lack of credibility, and access to music online. The Washington Post states, "The moment the VMAs ceased to matter might have happened in 2014, when Drake didn't bother appearing to receive his award. Or maybe it was even earlier than that: The Associated Press compared the energy of the VMAs to the scripted reality-TV show Cribs all the way back in 2006." MTV has also faced criticism for devoting most of its airtime outside the VMAs to reality shows and dramas, with music videos mainly airing in off-peak graveyard slots to suffice the minimum amount of music programming in the network's carriage agreements.
Ratings
Ratings are not available prior to 1994 because MTV was not subscribing to Nielsen Media Research's program ratings prior to 1994. The field "Cumulative viewers" shows the audience of the live simulcasts of the ceremony across many ViacomCBS channels as a whole.
| Year | Day | Time | Date | Households Rating | Households Share | MTV Viewers (in millions) | Cumulative TV Viewers (in millions) (not including Internet streams) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1994 | Thursday | 8:00–11:25pm | September 8, 1994 | 4.1 | N/a | 5.36 | N/a |
| 1995 | Thursday | 8:00–11:00pm | September 7, 1995 | 3.7 | 7 | 6.33 | N/a |
| 1996 | Wednesday | 8:00–11:00pm | September 4, 1996 | 3.6 | 6 | 5.07 | N/a |
| 1997 | Thursday | 8:00–11:00pm | September 4, 1997 | 5.2 | 9 | 7.47 | N/a |
| 1998 | Thursday | 8:00–11:13pm | September 10, 1998 | 5.8 | 10 | 8.94 | N/a |
| 1999 | Thursday | 8:00–11:13pm | September 9, 1999 | 8.0 | 14 | 11.96 | N/a |
| 2000 | Thursday | 8:00–11:09pm | September 7, 2000 | 6.5 | 11 | 9.85 | N/a |
| 2001 | Thursday | 8:00–11:26pm | September 6, 2001 | 6.6 | 11 | 10.76 | N/a |
| 2002 | Thursday | 8:00–11:17pm | August 29, 2002 | 6.6 | 11 | 11.95 | N/a |
| 2003 | Thursday | 8:00–11:03pm | August 28, 2003 | 6.4 | 11 | 10.71 | N/a |
| 2004 | Sunday | 8:00–11:11pm | August 29, 2004 | 6.3 | 11 | 10.32 | N/a |
| 2005 | Sunday | 8:00–11:23pm | August 28, 2005 | 5.0 | 8 | 8.01 | N/a |
| 2006 | Thursday | 8:00–11:28pm | August 31, 2006 | 3.6 | 6 | 5.77 | N/a |
| 2007 | Sunday | 9:00–11:12pm | September 9, 2007 | 4.0 | 7 | 7.082 | N/a |
| 2008 | Sunday | 9:00–11:20pm | September 7, 2008 | 5.0 | 8 | 8.425 | N/a |
| 2009 | Sunday | 9:00–11:21pm | September 13, 2009 | 7.5 | 8 | 8.972 | N/a |
| 2010 | Sunday | 9:00–11:15pm | September 12, 2010 | 10 | 8 | 11.398 | N/a |
| 2011 | Sunday | 9:00–11:27pm | August 28, 2011 | 10.8 | N/a | 12.445 | N/a |
| 2012 | Thursday | 8:00–10:00pm | September 6, 2012 | 2.8 | N/a | 6.134 | N/a |
| 2013 | Sunday | 9:00–11:28pm | August 25, 2013 | 7.8 | N/a | 10.066 | N/a |
| 2014 | Sunday | 9:00–11:13pm | August 24, 2014 | 4.2 | N/a | 8.257 | 10.3 |
| 2015 | Sunday | 9:00–11:37pm | August 30, 2015 | N/a | N/a | 5.025 | 9.8 |
| 2016 | Sunday | 9:00–11:54pm | August 28, 2016 | N/a | N/a | 3.273 | 6.5 |
| 2017 | Sunday | 8:00–11:05pm | August 27, 2017 | N/a | N/a | 2.661 | 5.36 |
| 2018 | Monday | 9:00–11:43pm | August 20, 2018 | N/a | N/a | 2.250 | 4.87 |
| 2019 | Monday | 8:00–10:58pm | August 26, 2019 | N/a | N/a | 1.926 | 6.8 |
| 2020 | Sunday | 8:00–10:14pm | August 30, 2020 | N/a | N/a | 1.315 | 6.4 |
| 2021 | Sunday | 8:00–11:06pm | September 12, 2021 | N/a | N/a | 0.900 | 3.7 |
| 2022 | Sunday | 8:00–11:19pm | August 28, 2022 | N/a | N/a | 0.705 | 3.85 |
| 2023 | Tuesday | 8:00–11:51pm | September 12, 2023 | N/a | N/a | 0.913 | 3.78 |
| 2024 | Wednesday | 8:00–11:18pm | September 11, 2024 | N/a | N/a | 0.728 | 4.09 |
| 2025 | Sunday | 8:00–11:03pm | September 7, 2025 | N/a | N/a | 0.491 | 5.495 |
Most wins
| † indicates an Video of the Year–winning video. |
| ‡ indicates an Video of the Year–nominated video |
Most wins overall
| Artist | Years | Number of awards | Awarded work |
|---|---|---|---|
| Taylor Swift | 2009–24 | 30 | "You Belong with Me" (1); "I Knew You Were Trouble"‡ (1); "Blank Space" (2); "Bad Blood"† (2); "I Don't Wanna Live Forever" (1); "You Need to Calm Down"† (2); "Me!" (1); "The Man"‡ (1); All Too Well: The Short Film† (3); "Anti-Hero"† (6); Artist of the Year (2); The Eras Tour (1); Midnights (1); "Fortnight"† (5); Best Pop |
| Beyoncé | 2003–21 | 28 | "Crazy in Love" (3); "Naughty Girl" (1); "Check on It" (1); "Beautiful Liar" (1); "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)"† (3); "Telephone"‡ (1) "Run the World (Girls)" (1); "Countdown"(1); Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award; "Pretty Hurts" (2); "Drunk in Love"‡ (1); "7/11"‡ (1); "Hold Up" (1); Lemonade (1); "Formation"† (6); "Apeshit"‡ (2); "Brown Skin Girl" (1) |
| Lady Gaga | 2009–25 | 22 | "Paparazzi" (2); "Poker Face"‡ (1); "Bad Romance"† (7); "Telephone"‡ (1); "Born This Way" (2); "Rain on Me"‡ (3); Tricon Award; Artist of the Year (2); "Abracadabra" (2); "Die With A Smile"‡ (1) |
| Madonna | 1986–99 | 20 | Video Vanguard Award; "Papa Don't Preach" (1); "Express Yourself" (3); "Like a Prayer"‡ (1); "Vogue"‡ (3); The Immaculate Collection (1); "Rain" (2); "Take a Bow" (1); "Ray of Light"† (5); "Frozen" (1); "Beautiful Stranger" (1) |
| Eminem | 1999–24 | 15 | "My Name Is" (1); "Forgot About Dre" (1) "The Real Slim Shady"† (2); "Without Me"† (4); "Lose Yourself"‡ (1); "We Made You"‡ (1); "Not Afraid"‡ (2); "Rap God" (1); "Houdini"‡ (2) |
| Ariana Grande | 2014–25 | 13 | "Problem" (1); "No Tears Left to Cry"‡ (1); "7 Rings" (1); Artist of the Year (1); "Boyfriend" (1); "Rain On Me"‡ (3); "Stuck With U" (1); "We Can't Be Friends (Wait for Your Love)"‡ (1); Brighter Days Ahead† (3) |
| Peter Gabriel | 1987–94 | "Sledgehammer"† (9); Video Vanguard Award; "Steam" (2); "Kiss That Frog" (1) | |
| R.E.M. | 1989–95 | 12 | "Orange Crush" (1); "Losing My Religion"† (6); "Everybody Hurts"‡ (4); Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award |
| Justin Timberlake | 2003–13 | 11 | "Cry Me a River"‡ (2); "Rock Your Body" (1); "What Goes Around... Comes Around"‡ (1); "Let Me Talk to You/My Love" (1); Male Artist of the Year; Quadruple Threat of the Year; Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award; "Suit & Tie" (1); "Mirrors"† (2) |
| Green Day | 1998–09 | "Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)" (1); "Boulevard of Broken Dreams"† (6); "American Idiot" (1); "21 Guns" (3) | |
| Aerosmith | 1990–98 | 10 | "Janie's Got a Gun"‡ (2); "The Other Side" (1); "Livin' on the Edge"‡ (1); "Cryin'"† (3); "Falling in Love (Is Hard on the Knees)" (1); "Pink" (1); "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" (1) |
| BTS | 2019–22 | "Boy with Luv" (1); Best Group (4); "On" (3); "Butter" (2) | |
| Red Hot Chili Peppers | 1992–22 | "Give It Away" (2); "Under the Bridge"‡ (1); Best Artist Website; "Californication"‡ (2); Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award; "Dani California"‡ (1); Global Icon Award; Black Summer (1) | |
| Fatboy Slim | 1999–01 | 9 | "Praise You" (3); "Weapon of Choice"‡ (6) |
| Janet Jackson | 1987–95 | "Nasty" (1); "The Pleasure Principle" (1); "Rhythm Nation" (1); Video Vanguard Award; "Love Will Never Do (Without You)" (1); "If" (1); "Scream"‡ (3) | |
| Kendrick Lamar | 2015–25 | "Alright"‡ (1); "HUMBLE."† (6); "All the Stars" (1); "Not Like Us" (1) | |
| A-ha | 1986 | 8 | "Take On Me"‡ (6); "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." (2) |
| Coldplay | 2002–25 | "Trouble" (1); "The Scientist" (3); "Paradise" (1); "Up&Up" (1); "Orphans" (1); "All My Love" (1) | |
| Lil Nas X | 2019–22 | "Old Town Road"‡ (2); "Montero (Call Me by Your Name)"† (3) "Industry Baby"‡ (3) | |
| Michael Jackson | 1984–95 | "Thriller"‡ (3); Video Vanguard Award; "Leave Me Alone"‡ (1); "Scream"‡ (3) | |
| Nicki Minaj | 2011–23 | "Super Bass" (1); "Starships" (1); "Anaconda" (1); "Chun-Li" (1); "Hot Girl Summer" (1); "Do We Have a Problem?" (1); Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award; "Super Freaky Girl"‡ (1) | |
| Billie Eilish | 2019–25 | "Bad Guy"‡ (1); Best New Artist; Push Artist of the Year; "Lo Vas a Olvidar" (1); "Your Power" (1); "Happier Than Ever" (1); "What Was I Made For" (1); "Guess" (1) | |
| Rihanna | 2007–18 | 7 | "Umbrella"† (2); "Live Your Life" (1); "We Found Love"† (1); "This Is What You Came For" (1); Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award; "Lemon" (1) |
| NSYNC | 2000–01 | "Bye Bye Bye"‡ (3); "Pop" (4) | |
| The Smashing Pumpkins | 1996 | "Tonight, Tonight"† (6); "1979" (1) | |
| Jay-Z | 1999–14 | "Can I Get A..." (1); "99 Problems"‡ (4); "Empire State of Mind" (1); "Drunk in Love"‡ (1) | |
| Katy Perry | 2011–24 | "Firework"† (1); "E.T." (2); "Wide Awake"‡ (1); "Dark Horse" (1); VMAs Most Iconic Performance; Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award | |
| P!nk | 2001–17 | "Lady Marmalade"† (2); "Get the Party Started" (2); "Stupid Girls" (1); "Just Give Me a Reason" (1); Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award | |
| En Vogue | 1992–94 | "My Lovin' (You're Never Gonna Get It)" (1); "Free Your Mind"‡ (3); "Whatta Man" (3) | |
| Shakira | 2000–25 | "Ojos Así" (1); "Whenever, Wherever" (1); "Hips Don't Lie"‡ (1); "Beautiful Liar" (1); Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award; "TQG" (1); "Soltera" (1) | |
| Beck | 1996–97 | 6 | "Where It's At" (1); "Devils Haircut" (2); "The New Pollution"‡ (3) |
| Post Malone | 2018–24 | "Rockstar" (1); "Fortnight"† (5) | |
| Britney Spears | 2008–11 | "Piece of Me"† (3); "Womanizer"‡ (1); "Till the World Ends" (1); Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award | |
| Bruno Mars | 2013-25 | "Locked Out of Heaven"‡ (1); "Treasure" (1); "Leave the Door Open" (2); "Apt."‡ (1); "Die With A Smile‡ (1) | |
| Justin Bieber | 2010–21 | "Baby" (1); "U Smile" (1); "Where Are Ü Now" (1); "Stuck with U" (1); Peaches (1); Artist of the Year | |
| Missy Elliott | 2003–19 | "Work It"† (2); "Lose Control" (2); "We Run This" (1); Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award | |
| U2 | 1987–01 | "With or Without You"‡ (1); "When Love Comes to Town" (1); "Even Better Than the Real Thing" (2); "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me" (1); Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award | |
| Ricky Martin | 1999-25 | "Livin' la Vida Loca"‡ (5); MTV Latin Icon Award | |
| Doja Cat | 2020–25 | Best New Artist; "Kiss Me More"‡ (1); "Best Friend" (1); "Woman"‡ (1); "Attention"‡ (1); "Born Again" (1) | |
| Paula Abdul | 1987–89 | 5 | "Nasty" (1, as choreographer); "Straight Up" (4) |
| Bruce Springsteen | 1985–94 | "I'm on Fire" (1); "We Are the World"‡ (2); "Dancing in the Dark" (1); "Streets of Philadelphia" (1) | |
| Gnarls Barkley | 2006–08 | "Crazy" (2); "Smiley Faces" (1); "Run" (2) | |
| Herbie Hancock | 1984 | "Rockit"‡ (5) | |
| Don Henley | 1985–90 | "The Boys of Summer"† (4); "The End of the Innocence"‡ (1) | |
| INXS | 1988 | "Need You Tonight / Mediate"† (5) | |
| Nirvana | 1992–94 | "Smells Like Teen Spirit"‡ (2); "In Bloom" (1); "Heart-Shaped Box"‡ (2) | |
| No Doubt | 1997–04 | "Don't Speak"‡ (1); "Hey Baby" (2); "It's My Life" (2) | |
| OutKast | 2001–04 | "Ms. Jackson" (1); "Hey Ya!"† (4) | |
| TLC | 1995–99 | "Waterfalls"† (4); "No Scrubs" (1) | |
| The White Stripes | 2002–08 | "Fell in Love with a Girl"‡ (3); "Seven Nation Army" (1); "Conquest" (1) | |
| J Balvin | 2018–20 | "Mi Gente" (1); "I Like It" (1); "Con Altura" (2); "Qué Pena" (1) | |
| Kanye West | 2005–17 | "Jesus Walks"‡ (1); "Good Life" (1); "E.T." (1); Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award; "Fade" (1) |
Most wins in a single night
| Artist | Year | Number of awards | Awarded work |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peter Gabriel | 1987 | 10 | "Sledgehammer"† (9); Video Vanguard Award (for Gabriel) |
| Taylor Swift | 2023 | 9 | "Anti-Hero"† (6); Midnights (1); The Eras Tour (1); Artist of the Year (for Swift). |
| A-ha | 1986 | 8 | "Take On Me"‡ (6); "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." (2) |
| Lady Gaga | 2010 | "Bad Romance"† (7); "Telephone"‡ (1) | |
| Beyoncé | 2016 | "Hold Up" (1); Lemonade (1); "Formation"† (6) | |
| The Smashing Pumpkins | 1996 | 7 | "Tonight, Tonight"† (6); "1979" (1) |
| Green Day | 2005 | "Boulevard of Broken Dreams"† (6); "American Idiot" (1) | |
| Taylor Swift | 2024 | "Fortnight"† (5); Best Pop (for Swift); Artist of the Year (for Swift). | |
| R.E.M. | 1991 | 6 | "Losing My Religion"† (6) |
| Madonna | 1998 | "Ray of Light"† (5); "Frozen" (1) | |
| Fatboy Slim | 2001 | "Weapon of Choice"‡ (6) | |
| Kendrick Lamar | 2017 | "HUMBLE."† (6) | |
| Herbie Hancock | 1984 | 5 | "Rockit"‡ (5) |
| INXS | 1988 | "Need You Tonight/Mediate"† (5) | |
| Beck | 1997 | "The New Pollution"‡ (3); "Devils Haircut" (2) | |
| Ricky Martin | 1999 | "Livin' La Vida Loca"‡ (5) | |
| Lady Gaga | 2020 | "Rain on Me"‡ (3); Artist of the Year (for Gaga); Tricon Award (for Gaga) | |
| Post Malone | 2024 | "Fortnight"† (5) |
Most wins for a single video
| Artist(s) | Year | Number of awards | Music video |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peter Gabriel | 1987 | 9 | "Sledgehammer"† |
| Lady Gaga | 2010 | 7 | "Bad Romance"† |
| A-ha | 1986 | 6 | "Take On Me"‡ |
| R.E.M. | 1991 | "Losing My Religion"† | |
| The Smashing Pumpkins | 1996 | "Tonight, Tonight"† | |
| Fatboy Slim (featuring Bootsy Collins) | 2001 | "Weapon of Choice"‡ | |
| Green Day | 2005 | "Boulevard of Broken Dreams"† | |
| Beyoncé | 2016 | "Formation"† | |
| Kendrick Lamar | 2017 | "HUMBLE."† | |
| Taylor Swift | 2023 | "Anti-Hero"† | |
| Herbie Hancock | 1984 | 5 | "Rockit"‡ |
| INXS | 1988 | "Need You Tonight / Mediate"† | |
| Madonna | 1998 | "Ray of Light"† | |
| Ricky Martin | 1999 | "Livin' La Vida Loca"‡ | |
| Taylor Swift (featuring Post Malone) | 2024 | "Fortnight"† |
Most nominations
| † | indicates an Video of the Year–winning video. |
| ‡ | indicates an Video of the Year–nominated video |
| * | indicates a video won at least 1 award |
Most nominations overall
| Artist | Years | Number of nominations | Nominated work |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beyoncé | 2003–25 | 85 | "Crazy in Love"* (4); "Me, Myself and I" (1); "Naughty Girl"* (4); "Check on It"* (1); "Beautiful Liar"* (4); Female Artist of the Year; "Irreplaceable"‡ (1); Quadruple Threat of the Year; "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)"*† (9); "Video Phone" (5); "Run the World (Girls)"* (3); "Countdown"* (3); "Love On Top" (1); "I Was Here" (1); "Pretty Hurts"* (4); "Drunk in Love"*‡ (2); "Partition" (2); "7/11"*‡ (5); "Hold Up"* (2); Lemonade* (1); "Formation"*† (6); "Freedom" (1); "Sorry" (1); "Apeshit"* (8); "Walk on Water" (1); "Savage (remix)" (1); "Already" (1); "Brown Skin Girl"* (2); "Break My Soul" (1); Artist of the Year (2); "Cuff It" (1); Renaissance World Tour (1); Renaissance (1); "Texas Hold 'Em" (2); VMAs Most Iconic Performance |
| Madonna | 1984–24 | 71 | "Borderline" (1); "Like a Virgin" (3); "Material Girl" (2); "Dress You Up" (1); "Like a Virgin" (live)(1); "Open Your Heart" (3); "Papa Don't Preach"* (3); "Express Yourself"* (5); "Like a Prayer"*‡ (2); "Vogue"*‡ (9); The Immaculate Collection* (1); "Like a Virgin" (Truth or Dare)(2); "Holiday" (Truth or Dare)(4); "Rain"* (2); "I'll Remember" (1); "Human Nature" (2); "Take a Bow"* (2); "You'll See" (1); "Ray of Light"*† (8); "Frozen"* (1); "Beautiful Stranger"* (3); Nothing Really Matters" (1); "American Pie" (1); "Don't Tell Me" (2); "Die Another Day" (1); "Hung Up"‡ (5); "4 Minutes" (1); Madame X (1); VMAs Most Iconic Performance (2) |
| Taylor Swift | 2008–25 | "Teardrops on My Guitar" (1); "You Belong with Me"* (1); "Fifteen" (1); "Mean" (1); "I Knew You Were Trouble"*‡ (2); "Blank Space"* (2); "Bad Blood"*† (8); "I Don't Wanna Live Forever"* (1); "Look What You Made Me Do" (3); "You Need to Calm Down"*† (9); "Me!"* (3); "The Man"*‡ (3); "Lover" (2); "Cardigan" (1); "Willow" (3); All Too Well: The Short Film*† (5); "Anti-Hero"*† (7); Artist of the Year* (4); The Eras Tour* (1); Midnights* (1); "Karma" (1); "Fortnight"*† (9); Best Pop*; VMAs Most Iconic Performance | |
| Eminem | 1999–25 | 69 | "Guilty Conscience" (1); "My Name Is"* (3); "Forgot About Dre"* (1) "The Real Slim Shady"*† (6); "Stan"‡ (5); "Without Me"*† (6); "Lose Yourself"*‡ (5); "Just Lose It" (1); "Mosh" (1); "Smack That" (1); "We Made You"*‡ (4); "Not Afraid"*‡ (8); "Love the Way You Lie" (4); "Berzerk" (1); "The Monster" (3); "Rap God"* (3); "River" (1); "Walk on Water" (1); "Godzilla"‡ (2); "From the D 2 the LBC" (1); Artist of the Year; "Houdini"*‡ (6); VMAs Most Iconic Performance; "Murdergram Deux" (1); "Somebody Save Me" (2) |
| Ariana Grande | 2014–25 | 57 | "Problem"* (4); "Bang Bang" (1); "Love Me Harder" (1); "Let Me Love You" (1); "Into You" (4); "Side to Side" (1); "No Tears Left to Cry"*‡ (4); "7 Rings"* (3); Artist of the Year* (5); "Boyfriend"* (1); "God is a Woman" (1); "Rule the World" (1); "Thank U, Next"‡ (5); "Rain On Me"*‡ (7); "Stuck With U" (2); "34+35" (1); "Positions" (1); Best Metaverse Performance; "The Boy Is Mine" (1); "We Can't Be Friends (Wait for Your Love)"*‡ (5); Best Pop Artist; Brighter Days Ahead*† (6) |
| Drake | 2009–25 | 53 | "Best I Ever Had" (1); "Find Your Love" (1); "Forever" (1); "HYFR"* (1); Take Care"‡ (4); "Started from the Bottom" (2); "Hold On, We're Going Home"* (1); "Hotline Bling"*‡ (4); "One Dance" (1); "Work" (2); Artist of the Year (2); "God's Plan"‡ (5); "Walk It Talk It" (1); "In My Feelings" (2); "Sicko Mode" (1); "Mia" (1); "Life Is Good"‡ (3); "Toosie Slide" (1); "Popstar"‡ (3); "Laugh Now Cry Later" (2); "What's Next" (1); Certified Lover Boy (1); "Wait for U" (2); "Way 2 Sexy"‡ (3); It's All a Blur Tour (1); "Falling Back" (1); Her Loss (1); "Staying Alive" (1); "Rich Baby Daddy" (2); "Nokia" (1) |
| Lady Gaga | 2009–25 | 52 | "Paparazzi"* (5); "Poker Face"*‡ (4); "Bad Romance"*† (10); "Telephone"*‡ (3); "Born This Way"* (2); "Judas" (2); "Shallow" (2); "Rain on Me"*‡ (7); Artist of the Year* (2); Best Quarantine Performance; "911" (2); VMAs Most Iconic Performance; "Abracadabra"* (6); "Die With A Smile"*‡ (4); Mayhem (1) |
| Kendrick Lamar | 2013–25 | 41 | "Swimming Pools (Drank)" (2); "Alright"*‡ (4); "Freedom" (1); Artist of the Year (2); "HUMBLE."*† (7); "All the Stars"* (1); "Tints" (2); "Family Ties" (3); "The Heart Part 5" (2); "N95" (2); "Count Me Out" (2); "Rich Spirit" (1); "Like That" (1); "Not Like Us"*‡ (9); GNX (1); "Luther" (1) |
| Justin Bieber | 2010–25 | 39 | "Baby"* (1); "U Smile"* (1); "Boyfriend" (3); "#thatPOWER" (1); "Where Are Ü Now"* (4); Purpose: The Movement (1); "Sorry"‡ (2); "Cold Water" (2); "Despacito" (remix) (1); "I'm the One" (1); "No Brainer" (1); "I Don't Care" (2); "Intentions" (1); "Stuck with U"* (2); "Peaches"* (4); Artist of the Year* (2); "Holy" (1); "Popstar"‡ (2); "Stay" (4); Best Metaverse Performance; "Daisies" (1); Best Pop Artist |
| Billie Eilish | 2019–25 | Artist of the Year; "Bad Guy"*‡ (5); Best New Artist*; "Hostage" (1); Push Artist of the Year*; "When the Party's Over" (1); "All the Good Girls Go to Hell" (3); "Everything I Wanted"‡ (2); "Xanny" (1); "Lo Vas a Olvidar"* (1); "Therefore I Am" (2); "Your Power"* (2); "Happier Than Ever"* (5); Happier Than Ever (1); Happier Than Ever: A Love Letter to Los Angeles (1); "What Was I Made For"* (2); "Lunch"‡ (1); "Birds of a Feather"‡ (3); "Guess"* (5) | |
| Janet Jackson | 1987–01 | 38 | "Nasty"* (3); "When I Think of You" (1); "The Pleasure Principle"* (2); "Rhythm Nation"* (2); "Love Will Never Do (Without You)"* (3); "That's the Way Love Goes" (3); "If"* (3); "Scream"*‡ (11); "Runaway" (1); "Together Again" (1); "What's It Gonna Be?!" (4); "All for You"‡ (4) |
| U2 | 1985–24 | "Pride (In the Name of Love)" (1); "With or Without You"*‡ (7); "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"‡ (4); "Where the Streets Have No Name"‡ (4); "When Love Comes to Town"* (1); "Even Better Than the Real Thing"* (3); "Stay (Faraway, So Close!)" (1); "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me"* (2); "Beautiful Day"‡ (1); "Elevation (Tomb Raider Mix)" (4); "Vertigo" (5); "Original of the Species" (2); "The Saints Are Coming" (1); "Where the Streets Have No Name" (1); "Atomic City" (1) | |
| Kanye West | 2004–19 | 37 | "All Falls Down" (4); "Jesus Walks"*‡ (3); "Gold Digger" (3); Male Artist of the Year; Quadruple Threat of the Year; "Stronger"‡ (3); "Good Life"* (1); "Homecoming" (1); "Love Lockdown"‡ (3); "Paranoid" (1); "All of the Lights" (4); "Power" (2); "Otis" (1); "Mercy" (2); "Paris" (2); "Black Skinhead" (1); "Famous"‡ (2); "Fade"* (1); "I Love It" (1) |
| Aerosmith | 1988–01 | 36 | "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)" (2); "Rag Doll" (1); "Janie's Got a Gun"*‡ (8); "The Other Side"* (1); Things That Go Pump in the Night (1); "Livin' on the Edge"*‡ (6); Amazing" (5); "Cryin'"*† (4); "Falling in Love (Is Hard on the Knees)"* (1); "Pink"* (2); "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing"* (2); "Jaded" (3) |
| Jay-Z | 1999–21 | "Can I Get A..."* (3); "Big Pimpin'" (1); "I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me)" (1); "03 Bonnie & Clyde" (1); "99 Problems"*‡ (6); Quadruple Threat of the Year; "Umbrella"*† (3); "D.O.A. (Death of Auto-Tune)" (2); "Empire State of Mind"* (3); "On to the Next One" (1); "Otis" (1); "Paris" (2); "Drunk in Love"*‡ (2); "Apeshit"*‡ (8); "Entrepreneur" (1) | |
| Missy Elliott | 1997–24 | "The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly)" (3); "Get Ur Freak On"‡ (6); "One Minute Man" (remix) (6); "Work It"*† (8); "I'm Really Hot" (2); "Lose Control"* (6); "We Run This"* (1); "Ching-a-Ling/Shake Your Pom Pom" (1); "WTF (Where They From)" (1); "Tempo" (1); VMAs Most Iconic Performance | |
| Ed Sheeran | 2013–25 | 35 | "Lego House" (1); "Sing"* (1); "Don't" (2); "Thinking Out Loud"‡ (4); "Castle on the Hill" (1); "Shape of You" (2); Artist of the Year* (2); "Perfect" (3); "River" (1); "I Don't Care" (2); "Beautiful People" (1); "Bad Habits"‡ (4); "Bam Bam" (1); "Shivers"‡ (3); - Tour (1); "Eyes Closed" (2); "Sapphire" (4) |
| The Weeknd | 2013–25 | "Wicked Games" (2); "Earned It" (1); "Love Me Harder" (1); "Can't Feel My Face" (3); Artist of the Year (3); "Reminder"‡ (4); "Blinding Lights"*† (6); "Save Your Tears"‡ (1); "You Right" (1); "Out of Time"* (1); "Take My Breath" (1); "Tears in the Club" (1); "La Fama" (1); "One Right Now" (1); "Creepin'" (2); Hurry Up Tomorrow (album)(1); Hurry Up Tomorrow (film)(2); "Timeless"‡ (3) | |
| Green Day | 1994–25 | 33 | "Longview" (3); "Basket Case"‡ (9); "Walking Contradiction" (1); "Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)"* (2); "Boulevard of Broken Dreams"*† (6); "American Idiot"* (2); "Wake Me Up When September Ends" (1); "The Saints Are Coming" (1); "21 Guns"* (3); "21st Century Breakdown" (1); "Bang Bang" (1); "Oh Yeah!" (1); "Dilemma" (1); "One Eyed Bastard" (1) |
| Bruno Mars | 2011–25 | "Grenade"‡ (3); "The Lazy Song" (1); "Locked Out of Heaven"*‡ (3); "Treasure"* (1); "24K Magic"‡ (3); Artist of the Year (2); "Finesse"‡ (Remix) (5); "Please Me" (1); "Leave the Door Open"* (3); "Apt."*‡ (7); "Die with a Smile"*‡ (4) | |
| Michael Jackson | 1984–14 | 32 | "Thriller"*‡ (6); "Bad" (1); "The Way You Make Me Feel" (1); "Leave Me Alone"*‡ (6); "Smooth Criminal" (3); "In the Closet" (1); "Black or White" (1); "Jam" (1); "Scream"*‡ (11); Love Never Felt So Good" (1) |
| Katy Perry | 2008–24 | "I Kissed a Girl" (5); "Hot n Cold" (1); "California Gurls" (2); "Firework"*† (3); "E.T."* (5); "Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.)" (1); "Teenage Dream" (1); "Part of Me" (1); "Wide Awake"*‡ (3); "Birthday" (1); "Dark Horse"* (2); "Bon Appétit" (1); "Chained to the Rhythm" (3); "Feels" (1); "Harleys in Hawaii: (1); VMAs Most Iconic Performance* | |
| Shakira | 2000–25 | "Ojos Así"* (2); "Whenever, Wherever"* (7); "La Tortura" (3); "Hips Don't Lie"*‡ (7); "Beautiful Liar"* (4); Latino Artist of the Year; "Chantaje" (1); "Girl Like Me" (1); Artist of the Year; "Acróstico" (1); "TQG"* (2); "Puntería" (1); "Soltera"* (1) | |
| Coldplay | 2001–25 | "Yellow" (1); "Trouble"* (2); "The Scientist"* (3); "Speed of Sound"‡ (4); "Violet Hill" (2); "Viva la Vida" (4); "Strawberry Swing" (1); "Paradise"* (1); "Princess of China" (2); "Adventure of a Lifetime" (1); "Up&Up"* (2); "A Head Full of Dreams" (1); "Orphans"* (1); "Higher Power" (1); "My Universe" (1); Best Group (2); "Feels Like I'm Falling in Love" (2); "All My Love"* (1) | |
| R.E.M. | 1988–01 | 31 | "The One I Love" (1); "Orange Crush"* (1); "Losing My Religion"*† (9); Tourfilm (1); "Man on the Moon" (6); "Everybody Hurts"*‡ (7); "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?" (1); "Tongue" (1); "The Great Beyond" (2); "Imitation of Life" (2) |
| Rihanna | 2006–18 | "SOS" (2); Female Artist of the Year; "Umbrella"*† (3); "Take a Bow" (2); "Live Your Life"* (1); "Rude Boy" (1); "We Found Love"*† (3); "Where Have You Been" (2); "Stay" (1); "The Monster" (3); "American Oxygen" (1); "This Is What You Came For"* (3); "Work" (2); "Wild Thoughts"‡ (4); "Lemon"* (2) | |
| Red Hot Chili Peppers | 1990–23 | 30 | "Higher Ground" (3); "Give It Away"* (6); "Under the Bridge"*‡ (3); "Warped" (1); Best Artist Website*; "Californication"*‡ (5); "By the Way" (1); "Dani California"*‡ (7); Best Group; "Black Summer"* (1); "Tippa My Tongue" (1) |
| Britney Spears | 1999–24 | "...Baby One More Time" (4); "Oops!...I Did It Again" (3); "(You Drive Me) Crazy" (1); "Stronger" (1); "I'm a Slave 4 U" (3); "Boys (The Co-Ed Remix)" (1); "Toxic"‡ (4); "Piece of Me"*† (3); "Circus" (5); "Womanizer"*‡ (2); "Till the World Ends"* (2); VMAs Most Iconic Performance | |
| Cardi B | 2018–24 | Artist of the Year (2); "Bartier Cardi" (1); Best New Artist*; "Dinero"* (2); "Finesse"‡ (Remix) (5); "Girls Like You" (1); "I Like It"* (1); "Money"* (1); "Please Me" (1); "Taki Taki" (1); "Wish Wish" (1); "WAP"‡ (5); "Rumors" (1); "Wild Side" (4); "No Love" (Extended Version)(1); "Tomorrow 2" (1); "Puntería" (1) | |
| Foo Fighters | 1996–23 | 27 | "Big Me"*‡ (5); "Monkey Wrench" (2); "Everlong" (3); "Learn to Fly" (2); "Best of You" (2); "The Pretender" (1); "Everlong" (1); "Walk"* (1); "Run" (1); "The Sky Is a Neighborhood" (1); "Shame Shame" (3); Best Group (2); Studio 666 (1); "Love Dies Young" (1); "The Teacher" (1) |
| Doja Cat | 2020–25 | Best New Artist*; "Say So" (3); Artist of the Year (2); "Kiss Me More"*‡ (2); "Best Friend"* (1); "Need to Know" (1); "You Right" (1); "Get Into It (Yuh)" (2); "Vegas" (1); "Woman"*‡ (4); "I Like You (A Happier Song)" (2); "Attention"*‡ (3); "Paint the Town Red"‡ (2); "Born Again"* (1); "Jealous Type" (1) | |
| Justin Timberlake | 2003–24 | 26 | "Cry Me a River"*‡ (5); "Rock Your Body"* (2); "Señorita" (1); "What Goes Around... Comes Around"*‡ (3); "Let Me Talk to You/My Love"* (1); Male Artist of the Year*; Quadruple Threat of the Year*; "SexyBack (1); "Suit & Tie"* (2); "Mirrors"*† (4); "Love Never Felt So Good" (1); "Can't Stop the Feeling!" (1); "Filthy" (1); "Say Something" (1); "Selfish" (1) |
| Miley Cyrus | 2017–25 | "7 Things" (2); "We Can't Stop" (4); "Wrecking Ball"*† (2); "Malibu" (1); "Mother's Daughter"* (4); "Midnight Sky" (1); Prisoner" (2); Endless Summer Vacation (1); "Flowers"‡ (4); "River" (1) "Easy Lover" (1); "End Of The World" (1); Best Pop Artist; Something Beautiful (1) | |
| Dua Lipa | 2018–24 | "IDGAF" (1); "New Rules" (1); "One Kiss" (2); "Electricity" (1); "Break My Heart" (1); "Don't Start Now" (1); "Physical"* (3); "Levitating" (2); "Prisoner" (2); "Un Dia (One Day)" (1); "Cold Heart (Pnau Remix)" (2); "Sweetest Pie" (3); "Dance the Night" (3); Best Pop; "Houdini"* (1); "Illusion" (1) | |
| Megan Thee Stallion | 2019–24 | 25 | "Hot Girl Summer"* (1); Artist of the Year (2); "Savage"* (2); "Savage (remix)" (1); "WAP"‡ (5); "On Me (remix)" (1); "Thot Shit" (1); "Sweetest Pie" (3); "Her" (3); "Boa"* (4); "Mamushi"* (1); "Wanna Be" (2) |
| Christina Aguilera | 2000–24 | "What a Girl Wants" (5); "Lady Marmalade"*† (6); "Dirrty" (4); "The Voice Within" (3); "Ain't No Other Man"‡ (4); "Candyman" (1); "Feel This Moment" (1); VMAs Most Iconic Performance | |
| SZA | 2017–25 | Best New Artist; Push Artist of the Year; "The Weekend" (1); "All the Stars"* (1); "Just Us" (1); "Kiss Me More"*‡ (2); "Good Days" (1); "No Love" (Extended Version)(1); "Shirt"* (2); SOS (1); "Kill Bill"‡ (5); Artist of the Year; "Rich Baby Daddy" (2); "Saturn" (1); "Snooze"*‡ (2); "Drive" (1); "Luther" (1) | |
| Nicki Minaj | 2011–23 | 24 | "Massive Attack" (1); "Moment 4 Life" (1); "Super Bass"* (2); "Beez in the Trap" (1); "Turn Me On" (1); "Starships"* (1); "Anaconda"* (2); "Bang Bang" (1); "Hey Mama" (1); "Side to Side" (1); "Chun-Li"* (1); "Hot Girl Summer"* (1); "Tusa" (2); "Do We Have a Problem?"* (1); "Super Freaky Girl"*‡ (4); Artist of the Year; "Barbie World" (1); "Love in the Way" (1) |
| Jennifer Lopez | 1999–18 | 23 | "If You Had My Love" (4); Best Artist Website; "Waiting for Tonight"* (2); "Love Don't Cost a Thing" (2); "I'm Real (Murder Remix)"* (1); "I'm Glad" (4); "Get Right" (4); Best Latino Artist; "Dance Again" (1); "Live It Up" (1); "Dinero"* (2) |
| Peter Gabriel | 1987–94 | 22 | "Big Time" (2); "Sledgehammer"*† (10); "Biko" (1); POV (1); "Digging in the Dirt"‡ (3); "Steam"* (3); "Kiss That Frog"* (2) |
| Lil Nas X | 2019–22 | Best New Artist; "Old Town Road"*‡ (8); "Montero (Call Me by Your Name)"*† (5) "Industry Baby"*‡ (7); Artist of the Year | |
| Linkin Park | 2001–25 | "Crawling" (2); "In The End"*‡ (3); "Somewhere I Belong"* (1); "Breaking the Habit"* (2); Best Group; "What I've Done" (2); "Bleed It Out" (1); "Shadow of the Day"* (2); "Waiting for the End" (1); "Burn It Down" (2); "Until It's Gone" (1); "One More Light" (1); "Lost" (Original) (1); "Friendly Fire" (1); "The Emptiness Machine" (1) | |
| Post Malone | 2018–25 | Artist of the Year (2); "Rockstar"* (1); "Better Now" (1); "Goodbyes" (1); "Circles" (1); Best Quarantine Performance; "One Right Now" (1); "I Like You (A Happier Song)" (2); "Fortnight"*† (9); "I Had Some Help" (2); "Pour Me a Drink" (1) | |
| P!nk | 2000–23 | 21 | "There You Go" (1); "Lady Marmalade"*† (6); "Get the Party Started"* (3); "Stupid Girls"* (1); "So What" (1); "Funhouse" (2); "Fuckin' Perfect" (1); "Just Give Me a Reason"* (3); "What About Us" (1); "All I Know So Far" (1); "Trustfall" (1) |
| Adele | 2008–23 | "Chasing Pavements" (1); "Rolling in the Deep"*‡ (7); "Someone Like You" (1); "Hello"‡ (7); "Send My Love (To Your New Lover)" (1); 30 (1); "Easy On Me" (1); "Oh My God" (1); "I Drink Wine" (1) | |
| BTS | 2019–22 | "Boy with Luv"* (4); Best Group* (4); "On"* (3); "Butter"* (5); "Dynamite" (1); Best Metaverse Performance; "My Universe" (1); "Permission to Dance" (1); "Yet to Come (The Most Beautiful Moment)" (1) | |
| Chris Brown | 2006–25 | "Run It!" (2); "Yo (Excuse Me Miss)" (1); "Wall to Wall" (1); "Forever"‡ (3); "Kiss Kiss" (1); "With You"* (1); "Look at Me Now" (2); "Turn Up the Music"* (2); "Fine China" (1); "Loyal" (1); Royalty (1); "Come Through" (1); "Go Crazy" (1); "How Does It Feel" (1); "Sensational" (1); "Residuals" (1) | |
| Olivia Rodrigo | 2021–24 | 20 | Artist of the Year; Best New Artist*; "Drivers License"* (2); "Good 4 U" (2); "Brutal"‡ (2); Driving Home 2 U (1); "Traitor" (1); "Vampire"*‡ (6); "Bad Idea Right?" (1); Best Pop; "Get Him Back!" (1); "Obsessed" (1) |
| Usher | 1998–24 | 19 | "You Make Me Wanna..." (1); "U Don't Have to Call" (1); "U Got It Bad" (2); "Burn" (1); "Yeah!"*‡ (4); "Caught Up" (1); "My Boo" (1); "Love in This Club" (1); "OMG" (3); "Climax" (1); "Good Kisser" (1); "Good Good" (1); "Ruin" (1) |
| NSYNC | 1999–24 | "Tearin' Up My Heart" (3); "Bye Bye Bye"*‡ (6); "Pop"* (6); "Girlfriend" (remix) (2); "Gone"‡ (1); Best Group | |
| Björk | 1993–09 | "Human Behaviour" (7); "Army of Me" (2); "It's Oh So Quiet"* (6); "Bachelorette"* (1); "All Is Full of Love"* (2); "Human Behaviour" (1) | |
| Alicia Keys | 2001–24 | 18 | "Fallin'"* (2); "A Woman's Worth" (2); "If I Ain't Got You"* (2); "You Don't Know My Name" (1); "Karma"* (1); "My Boo" (1); "Empire State of Mind"* (3); "Raise a Man" (1); "Underdog" (1); "City of Gods (Part II)" (1); "Stay"(1); "If I Ain't Got You" (Orchestral) (1); "Lifeline" (1) |
| Harry Styles | 2017–23 | "Sign of the Times" (2); "Adore You" (3); "Watermelon Sugar" (1); "Treat People with Kindness"* (3); Artist of the Year; "As It Was"*‡ (5); Harry's House* (1); "Late Night Talking" (1); "Music for a Sushi Restaurant" (1) | |
| The White Stripes | 2002–08 | "Fell in Love with a Girl"*‡ (4); "Seven Nation Army"* (4); "The Hardest Button to Button" (4); "Blue Orchid" (3); Best Group; "Conquest"* (2) | |
| Will Smith | 1997–02 | "Men in Black"* (4); "Gettin' Jiggy Wit It"*‡ (5); "Just the Two of Us"* (1); "Miami"* (3); "Wild Wild West"‡ (3); "Black Suits Comin' (Nod Ya Head)" (2) | |
| En Vogue | 1992–94 | "My Lovin' (You're Never Gonna Get It)"* (6); "Free Your Mind"*‡ (8); "Runaway Love" (1); "Whatta Man"* (3) | |
| Bad Bunny | 2018–25 | "I Like It"* (1); "Mia" (1); "Yo Perreo Sola" (1); "Dakiti" (1); "Un Dia (One Day)" (1); Artist of the Year* (3); "Tití Me Preguntó" (1); "Me Porto Bonito" (1); Un Verano Sin Ti (1); "El Apagón – Aquí Vive Gente" (1); "Un x100to" (1); "Where She Goes" (1); "Monaco" (1); "Baile Inolvidable" (1); Debí Tirar Más Fotos (1); Debí Tirar Más Fotos (Short Film)(1) | |
| TLC | 1995–14 | 17 | "Waterfalls"*† (10); "No Scrubs"* (6); "Crooked Smile" (1) |
| Paula Abdul | 1987–95 | "Nasty"* (1, as choreographer); "When I Think of You" (1, as choreographer); "Straight Up"* (6); "Opposites Attract" (6); "Rush Rush" (1); "My Love Is for Real" (2) | |
| DJ Khaled | 2017–23 | "I'm the One" (1); "Wild Thoughts"‡ (4); "Dinero"* (2); "No Brainer" (1); "Higher" (1); "Just Us" (1); "Wish Wish" (1); Popstar"‡ (3); "Every Chance I Get" (1); "Big Energy" (remix)(1); Staying Alive" (1) | |
| Fall Out Boy | 2005–23 | 16 | "Sugar, We're Goin Down"* (1); "Dance, Dance"* (2); Best Group*; "Thnks fr th Mmrs" (1); "Beat It" (1); "I Don't Care" (1); "My Songs Know What You Did in the Dark (Light Em Up)" (1); "Uma Thurman"* (1); "Irresistible" (1); "Young and Menace" (1); "Champion" (1); "Bishops Knife Trick" (1); "Dear Future Self (Hands Up)" (1); "Hold Me Like a Grudge" (1); "Love from the Other Side" (1) |
| Busta Rhymes | 1996–11 | "Woo Hah!! Got You All in Check" (1); "Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could See" (4); "Gimme Some More" (1); "What's It Gonna Be?!" (4); "Pass the Courvoisier, Part II" (1); "I Know What You Want" (1); "Touch It Remix" (2); "Look at Me Now" (2) | |
| Bruce Springsteen | 1985–97 | "Dancing in the Dark"* (2); "I'm on Fire"* (1); "Glory Days" (2); "Born to Run" (1); "War" (1); "Tunnel of Love"‡ (5); "Human Touch" (1); "Streets of Philadelphia"* (2); "Secret Garden" (1) | |
| Camila Cabello | 2017–24 | "OMG" (1); Artist of the Year*; "Havana"*† (4); "Señorita"* (5); "My Oh My" (1); "Don't Go Yet" (1); "Bam Bam" (1); Best Pop; "I Luv It" (1) | |
| The Smashing Pumpkins | 1994–99 | "Disarm" (2); "1979"* (1); "Tonight, Tonight"*† (8); "The End Is the Beginning Is the End" (4); Best Artist Website | |
| Selena Gomez | 2012–25 | "Love You like a Love Song" (1); "Come & Get It"* (2); "Good for You" (1); "Kill Em with Kindness" (1); "It Ain't Me" (1); "We Don't Talk Anymore" (1); "I Can't Get Enough" (1); "Taki Taki" (1); "Boyfriend" (1); "Ice Cream" (1); "Calm Down"* (3); "Sunset Blvd" (1); "Younger and Hotter Than Me" (1) | |
| Sabrina Carpenter | 2024–25 | Artist of the Year; Best Pop; "Espresso"* (2); "Please Please Please" (3); Best Pop Artist*; "Manchild"*‡ (7); Short n' Sweet* (1) | |
| George Michael | 1988–09 | 15 | "Faith" (1); "Father Figure"* (2); "Freedom! '90" (5); "Killer / Papa Was a Rollin' Stone"* (3); "Fastlove"* (3); "Freedom! '90" (1) |
| Panic! at the Disco | 2006–23 | "I Write Sins Not Tragedies"*† (5); "Nine in the Afternoon" (2); "Victorius" (1); "Say Amen (Saturday Night)" (1); "High Hopes"* (1); "Me!"* (3); "Viva Las Vengeance" (1); "Middle of a Breakup" (1) | |
| Thirty Seconds to Mars | 2006–23 | "The Kill"* (2); "Kings and Queens"*‡ (4); "Hurricane" (3); "Up in the Air"* (3); "City of Angels" (1); "Walk on Water" (1); "Stuck" (1) | |
| Beck | 1994–06 | "Loser" (3); "Where It's At"* (2); "Devils Haircut"* (2); "The New Pollution"*‡ (5); "Deadweight" (1); "E-Pro" (1); "Hell Yes" (1) | |
| Demi Lovato | 2012–25 | "Skyscraper"* (1); "Heart Attack" (1); "Really Don't Care" (1); "Cool For The Summer" (1); "Irresistible" (1); "Sorry Not Sorry" (2); "Échame la Culpa" (1); "Solo" (1); "I Love Me" (2); "Dancing with the Devil" (1); "Swine" (2); "Fast" (1) | |
| Blackpink | 2019–25 | Best Group* (6); "Kill This Love" (1); "How You Like That"* (1); Ice Cream" (1); Best Metaverse Performance*; Born Pink World Tour (1); "Pink Venom"* (4) | |
| Charli XCX | 2014-25 | "Boom Clap" (1); "Fancy"‡ (4); Best Metaverse Performance; "360" (1); "Apple" (1); "Von Dutch" (1); "Guess"* (5); Best Pop Artist | |
| Metallica | 1989–23 | 14 | "One" (1); "Enter Sandman"* (3); "Until It Sleeps"* (2); "The Unforgiven II" (1); "I Disappear" (5); "St. Anger" (1); "Lux Æterna" (1) |
| Halsey | 2016–21 | "Closer" (3); "Now or Never" (1); Artist of the Year; "Boy with Luv"* (4); "Nightmare" (2); "Graveyard" (1); "You Should Be Sad" (1); "Be Kind" (1) | |
| Steve Winwood | 1987–89 | "Higher Love"‡ (7); "Back in the High Life Again" (1); "Roll with It"‡ (6) | |
| Jonas Brothers | 2008–25 | "Burnin' Up"‡ (2); Artist of the Year; Best Group (4); "Sucker"*‡ (4); "What a Man Gotta Do" (1); "Do It Like That" (1); "Waffle House" (1) | |
| J Balvin | 2018–25 | "Mi Gente"* (1); "I Like It"* (1); "Con Altura"* (3); "I Can't Get Enough" (1); "Say My Name" (1); "Amarillo" (1); "China" (1); "Qué Pena"* (1); "Ritmo (Bad Boys for Life)" (1); "Un Dia (One Day)" (1); "In da Getto" (1); "Rio" (1) | |
| Imagine Dragons | 2012–25 | "It's Time" (1); "Radioactive" (1); "Demons" (1); "Thunder" (1); "Whatever It Takes"* (1); "Natural" (1); "Follow You" (1); Best Group (3); "Enemy" (1); "Crushed" (1); "Eyes Closed" (1); "Wake Up" (1) | |
| Twenty One Pilots | 2013–25 | "Holding on to You" (1); "Heathens"* (1); "Heavydirtysoul"* (1); "My Blood" (1); Best Group (4); "Level of Concern" (2); "Shy Away" (1); "Saturday" (1); Best Metaverse Performance; "The Contract" (1) | |
| David Bowie | 1984–16 | 13 | "China Girl"* (3); "Modern Love" (1); "Blue Jean (live)" (1); "Dancing in the Street"* (1); "Day-In Day-Out" (1); "I'm Afraid of Americans" (1); Best Artist Website; "Blackstar"* (1); "Lazarus" (3) |
| Calvin Harris | 2012–18 | "Feel So Close"* (1); "I Need Your Love" (2); "Sweet Nothing" (1); "Summer" (1); "How Deep Is Your Love"* (1); This Is What You Came For"* (3); "Feels" (1); "My Way" (1); "One Kiss" (2) | |
| ZZ Top | 1984–90 | "Gimme All Your Lovin'" (1); "Legs"* (2); "Sharp Dressed Man"* (3); "Rough Boy"* (6); "Doubleback" (1) | |
| Don Henley | 1985–90 | "The Boys of Summer"*† (7); "The End of the Innocence"*‡ (6) | |
| Young Thug | 2017–22 | "Wyclef Jean"* (1); "Havana"*† (4); "Goodbyes" (1); "The London" (1); "Franchise"* (2); "Go Crazy" (1); "Way 2 Sexy"‡ (3) | |
| Eurythmics | 1984–88 | "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)"* (1); "Would I Lie to You?" (5); "Missionary Man" (5); "I Need a Man" (1); "You Have Placed a Chill in My Heart" (1) | |
| Shawn Mendes | 2017–21 | "There's Nothing Holdin' Me Back" (1); "Treat You Better" (1); "In My Blood" (3); Artist of the Year; "Señorita"* (5); "Summer of Love" (1); "Wonder" (1) | |
| Fatboy Slim | 1999–01 | "Praise You"* (4); "Weapon of Choice"*‡ (9) | |
| Prince | 1985–06 | 12 | "When Doves Cry" (1); "Raspberry Beret"* (1); "U Got the Look"* (4); "I Wish U Heaven" (1); "Batdance" (1); "Cream"* (1); "7" (1); "Musicology" (1); "Black Sweat" (1) |
| Radiohead | 1996–09 | "Just" (1); "Paranoid Android" (2); "Karma Police" (4); "There There"* (4); "Karma Police" (1) | |
| Childish Gambino | 2012–19 | "Heartbeat" (1); "3005" (1); "Sober" (1); "Telegraph Ave." (1); "This Is America"*‡ (7); "Feels Like Summer" (1) | |
| Jack Harlow | 2020–24 | Best New Artist; "Whats Poppin" (1); Artist of the Year; "Industry Baby"*‡ (7); "First Class"* (1); "Lovin on Me" (1) | |
| Cyndi Lauper | 1984–87 | "Girls Just Want to Have Fun"*‡ (6); "Time After Time" (3); "She Bop" (1); "True Colors" (1); "What's Going On" (1) | |
| Lizzo | 2019–22 | Best New Artist; Push Artist of the Year; "Tempo" (1); "Truth Hurts" (1); "Cuz I Love You" (1); "Good as Hell" (1); "Rumors" (1); Artist of the Year; "About Damn Time"* (4) | |
| Karol G | 2019–25 | "Secreto" (1); China" (1); "Tusa" (2); "Bichota" (1); "Mamiii" (1); Artist of the Year; Mañana Será Bonito Tour (1); "TQG"* (2); "Mi Ex Tenía Razón" (1); "Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido" (1) | |
| Black Eyed Peas | 1999–21 | 11 | "Joints and Jam" (1); "Request + Line" (1); "Hey Mama"* (3); "Dont Phunk with my Heart" (1); "My Humps"* (2); "Mamacita" (1); "Ritmo (Bad Boys for Life)" (1); "Girl Like Me" (1) |
| Lil Wayne | 2006–23 | "Fireman" (1); "Lollipop"* (2); "6 Foot 7 Foot" (1); "Look at Me Now" (2); "How To Love" (1); "Loyal" (1); "Let Me Love You" (1); "I'm the One" (1); “Kant Nobody" (1) | |
| Destiny's Child | 2000–16 | "Say My Name"* (3); "Independent Women Part I" (2); "Survivor"* (3); "Lose My Breath" (1); "Soldier" (1); "The Girl Is Mine" (1) | |
| Bryan Adams | 1985–96 | "Heaven" (1); "Run to You" (5); "It's Only Love"* (1); "Summer of '69" (1); "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" (1); "Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman?" (1); "The Only Thing That Looks Good on Me Is You" (1) | |
| Kelly Clarkson | 2003–13 | "Miss Independent" (3); "Since U Been Gone"* (3); "Because of You"* (2); "My Life Would Suck Without You" (1); "Dark Side" (1); "People Like Us" (1) | |
| Van Halen | 1984–92 | "Jump"* (3); "Finish What Ya Started" (1); "Right Now"*† (7) | |
| Future | 2017–24 | "Mask Off" (1); "Life Is Good"‡ (3); "Wait for U" (2); "Way 2 Sexy"‡ (3); "Superhero (Heroes & Villains)" (1); "Like That" (1) | |
| No Doubt | 1997–04 | "Don't Speak"*‡ (2); "Hey Baby"* (2); "Underneath It All" (2); "It's My Life"* (5) | |
| Gwen Stefani | 2001–07 | "Let Me Blow Ya Mind"* (3); "South Side"* (1); "Hollaback Girl"*‡ (4); "What You Waiting For?"* (2); "The Sweet Escape" (1) | |
| MC Hammer | 1989–94 | "Turn This Mutha Out" (1); "U Can't Touch This"* (5); "Here Comes The Hammer" (1);"Pray" (1); "2 Legit 2 Quit" (1); "Addams Groove" (1); "Pumps and a Bump" (1) | |
| Garbage | 1996-99 | "Stupid Girl" (1); "Queer" (1); "Push It" (8); "Special"* (1) | |
| INXS | 1986-89 | "What You Need" (1); "Devil Inside" (1); "Need You Tonight / Mediate"*† (8); "New Sensation" (1) | |
| Korn | 1999-02 | "Freak on a Leash"*‡ (9); "Falling Away from Me" (1); "Here to Stay" (1) | |
| Ricky Martin | 1999-00 | "Livin' la Vida Loca"*‡ (9); "Shake Your Bon-Bon" (2) | |
| A-ha | 1986 | "Take On Me"*‡ (8); "The Sun Always Shines on T.V."* (3) | |
| Dire Straits | 1986 | "Money for Nothing"*† (11) | |
| Elton John | 1984-22 | 10 | "I'm Still Standing" (2); "Sad Songs (Say So Much)"* (1); "Candle in the Wind (live)" (1); "Believe" (1); "This Train Don't Stop There Anymore" (3); "Cold Heart (Pnau Remix)" (2) |
| Diddy | 1997-23 | "I'll Be Missing You"* (2); "It's All About the Benjamins"*‡ (2); "Come with Me" (1); "Bad Boy for Life" (1); "Creepin'" (2); "Gotta Move On" (2) | |
| Brandy | 1995-16 | "Baby" (1); "I Wanna Be Down" (1); "Brokenhearted" (1); "Sittin' Up in My Room" (1); "The Boy Is Mine"‡ (2); "Have You Ever?" (1); "What About Us?" (1); "Talk About Our Love" (1); "The Girl Is Mine" (1) | |
| Dr. Dre | 1993-09 | "Nuthin' but a 'G' Thang" (1); "Let Me Ride" (1); "Keep Their Heads Ringin"* (1); "Been There, Done That" (2); "My Name Is" (1, as director); "Forgot About Dre"* (1) "The Real Slim Shady" (1, as director); "Stan" (1, as director); "Nuthin' but a 'G' Thang" (1) | |
| John Legend | 2005-20 | "Ordinary People" (3); "All of Me" (1); "One Man Can Change the World"* (1); "Surefire"* (1); "Higher" (1); "Preach" (1); Best Quarantine Performance; "Bigger Love" (1) | |
| Engenheiros do Hawaii | 1990-03 | "Alívio Imediato" (1); "Refrão de Bolero" (1); "O Exército de um Homem Só" (1); "Parabólica" (1); "A Promessa" (1); "A Montanha" (1); "Eu Que Não Amo Você" (1); "Negro Amor" (1); "3a do Plural" (1); "Até o Fim" (1) | |
| Os Paralamas do Sucesso | 1990-03 | "Perplexo" (1); "Caleidoscópio" (1); "Trac Trac" (1); "Uma Brasileira"* (1); "Lourinha Bombril" (1); "La Bella Luna" (1); "Ela Disse Adeus" (1); "Depois da Queda o Coice" (1); "Aonde Quer Que Eu Vá" (1); "Cuide Bem do Seu Amor" (1) | |
| Chris Isaak | 1985-95 | "Dancin'" (2); "Wicked Game"*‡ (7); "Somebody's Crying" (1) | |
| Billy Idol | 1984-93 | "Dancing with Myself" (3); "Eye Without a Face" (2); "Cradle of Love"* (3); "Shock to the System" (2) | |
| Bryson Tiller | 2016-23 | Best New Artist; "Don't" (2); "Wild Thoughts"‡ (4); "Could've Been" (1); "Gotta Move On" (2) | |
| Khalid | 2017-22 | Best New Artist*; Push Artist of the Year; "1-800-273-8255" (2); "Silence" (1); "Talk" (2); "Beautiful People" (1); "Eleven" (1); "Numb" (1) | |
| Mýa | 1998-03 | "Ghetto Supastar (That Is What You Are)" (2); "Lady Marmalade"*† (6); "My Love Is Like...Wo" (2) | |
| Rosalía | 2019-23 | Best New Artist; "Con Altura"* (3); "A Palé" (1); "Lo Vas a Olvidar"* (1); "Bizcochito" (1); "La Fama" (1); "Saoko"* (1); "Despechá" (1) | |
| Talking Heads | 1984-87 | "Burning Down the House" (1); "Once in a Lifetime" (live)(1); "And She Was" (2); "Road to Nowhere"‡ (3); "Wild Wild Life"* (3) | |
| Nirvana | 1992-94 | "Smells Like Teen Spirit"*‡ (4); "In Bloom" (1); "Heart-Shaped Box"*‡ (5) | |
| Jamiroquai | 1997 | "Virtual Insanity"*† (10) | |
| Backstreet Boys | 1998-25 | "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)"* (2); "I Want It That Way"*‡ (4); "The Call" (2); Best Group (2) | |
| FKA Twigs | 2015-25 | "Pendulum" (1); "Two Weeks" (2); M3LL155X (2); "Cellophane" (3); "Tears in the Club" (1); "Eusexua" (1) | |
| Lenny Kravitz | 1990-25 | "Let Love Rule" (1); "Are You Gonna Go My Way"* (2); "Fly Away" (2); "Again" (1); "Low" (1); "Raise Vibration" (1); "Human"* (1); "Honey" (1) | |
| Travis Scott | 2019-25 | "The London" (1); "Sicko Mode" (1); "Highest in the Room" (2); "Franchise"* (2); "Fe!n" (1); "4x4" (1); "Active" (1); "TaTaTa" (1) |
Most nominations in a single night
| Artist | Year | Number of nominations | Nominated work |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lady Gaga | 2010 | 13 | "Bad Romance" (10); "Telephone" (3) |
| Peter Gabriel | 1987 | 12 | "Big Time" (2); "Sledgehammer" (10) |
| Cardi B | 2018 | Artist of the Year (for Cardi B); "Bartier Cardi" (1); Best New Artist (for Cardi B); "Dinero" (2); "Finesse (Remix)" (5); "Girls Like You" (1); "I Like It" (1) | |
| Ariana Grande | 2019 | "7 Rings" (3); Artist of the Year (for Grande); "Boyfriend" (1); "God Is a Woman" (1); "Rule the World" (1); "Thank U, Next" (5) | |
| Taylor Swift | "Me!" (3); "You Need to Calm Down" (9) | ||
| 2024 | Artist of the Year (for Swift); Best Pop (for Swift); "Fortnight" (9); VMAs Most Iconic Performance (for Swift) | ||
| Lady Gaga | 2025 | "Abracadabra" (6); Artist of the Year (for Gaga); "Die with a Smile" (4); Mayhem (1) | |
| A-ha | 1986 | 11 | "Take On Me" (8); "The Sun Always Shines on T.V." (3) |
| Dire Straits | "Money for Nothing" (11) | ||
| Michael Jackson & Janet Jackson | 1995 | "Scream" (11) | |
| Beyoncé | 2016 | "Formation" (6); "Freedom" (1); "Hold Up" (2); Lemonade (1); "Sorry" (1) | |
| Taylor Swift | 2023 | Artist of the Year (for Swift); "Anti-Hero" (7); The Eras Tour (1); "Karma" (1); Midnights (1) | |
| Post Malone | 2024 | "Fortnight" (9); "I Had Some Help" (2) | |
| Bruno Mars | 2025 | "Apt." (7); "Die with a Smile" (4) | |
| R.E.M. | 1991 | 10 | "Losing My Religion" (9); Tourfilm (1) |
| TLC | 1995 | "Waterfalls" (10) | |
| Jamiroquai | 1997 | "Virtual Insanity" (10) | |
| Katy Perry | 2011 | "E.T." (5); "Firework" (3); "Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.)" (1); "Teenage Dream" (1) | |
| Taylor Swift | 2015 | "Bad Blood" (8); "Blank Space" (2) | |
| Billie Eilish | 2019 | Artist of the Year (for Eilish); "Bad Guy" (5); Best New Artist (for Eilish); "Hostage" (1); Push Artist of the Year (for Eilish); "When the Party's Over" (1) | |
| Kendrick Lamar | 2025 | Artist of the Year (for Lamar); GNX (1); "Luther" (1); "Not Like Us" (7) | |
| Cyndi Lauper | 1984 | 9 | "Girls Just Want to Have Fun" (6); "Time After Time" (3) |
| INXS | 1988 | "Devil Inside" (1); "Need You Tonight / Mediate" (8) | |
| Michael Jackson | 1989 | "Leave Me Alone" (6); "Smooth Criminal" (3) | |
| Madonna | 1990 | "Vogue" (9) | |
| Red Hot Chili Peppers | 1992 | "Give It Away" (6); "Under the Bridge" (3) | |
| Aerosmith | 1994 | "Amazing" (5); "Cryin'" (4) | |
| Green Day | 1995 | "Basket Case" (9) | |
| The Smashing Pumpkins | 1996 | "1979" (1); "Tonight, Tonight" (8) | |
| Madonna | 1998 | "Frozen" (1); "Ray of Light" (8) | |
| Korn | 1999 | "Freak on a Leash" (9) | |
| Ricky Martin | "Livin' la Vida Loca" (9) | ||
| Fatboy Slim | 2001 | "Weapon of Choice" (9) | |
| Beyoncé | 2009 | "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)" (9) | |
| Lady Gaga | "Paparazzi" (5); "Poker Face" (4) | ||
| Lil Nas X | 2019 | Best New Artist (for Lil Nas X); "Old Town Road (Remix)" (8) | |
| Ariana Grande | 2020 | "Rain on Me" (7); "Stuck with U" (2) | |
| Lady Gaga | Artist of the Year (for Gaga); Best Quarantine Performance; "Rain on Me" (7) | ||
| Justin Bieber | 2021 | Artist of the Year (for Bieber); "Holy" (1); "Peaches" (4); "Popstar" (2, starring); "Stay" (1) | |
| Sabrina Carpenter | 2025 | Best Pop Artist (for Carpenter); "Manchild" (7); Short n' Sweet (1) | |
| Herbie Hancock | 1984 | 8 | "Rockit" (8) |
| The Police | "Every Breath You Take" (8) | ||
| David Lee Roth | 1985 | "California Girls" (3); "Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody" (5) | |
| George Harrison | 1988 | "Got My Mind Set on You" (2); "When We Was Fab" (6) | |
| U2 | "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" (4); "Where the Streets Have No Name" (4) | ||
| Aerosmith | 1990 | "Janie's Got a Gun" (8) | |
| En Vogue | 1993 | "Free Your Mind" (8) | |
| Garbage | 1998 | "Push It" (8) | |
| Missy Elliott | 2003 | "Work It" (8) | |
| Green Day | 2005 | "American Idiot" (2); "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" (6) | |
| Eminem | 2010 | "Not Afraid" (8) | |
| Beyoncé | 2014 | "Drunk in Love" (2); "Partition" (2); "Pretty Hurts" (4) | |
| Iggy Azalea | "Fancy" (4); "Problem" (4) | ||
| Adele | 2016 | "Hello" (7); "Send My Love (To Your New Lover)" (1) | |
| Kendrick Lamar | 2017 | Artist of the Year (for Lamar); "Humble" (7) | |
| The Carters | 2018 | "Apeshit" (8) | |
| Drake | Artist of the Year (for Drake); "God's Plan" (5); "In My Feelings" (1); "Walk It Talk It" (1) | ||
| Billy Ray Cyrus | 2019 | "Old Town Road (Remix)" (8) | |
| Doja Cat | 2022 | "Get Into It (Yuh)" (2); "I Like You (A Happier Song)" (1); "Vegas" (1); "Woman" (4) | |
| Harry Styles | Artist of the Year (for Styles); "As It Was" (5); Harry's House (1); "Late Night Talking" (1) | ||
| Jack Harlow | Artist of the Year (for Harlow); "First Class" (1); "Industry Baby" (6) | ||
| SZA | 2023 | "Kill Bill" (5); "Shirt" (2); SOS (1) | |
| Eminem | 2024 | Artist of the Year (for Eminem); "Houdini" (6); VMAs Most Iconic Performance (for Eminem) | |
| Rosé | 2025 | "Apt." (7); "Toxic Till the End" (1) | |
| Lindsey Buckingham | 1985 | 7 | "Go Insane" (4); "Slow Dancing" (3) |
| Don Henley | "The Boys of Summer" (7) | ||
| Pat Benatar | 1986 | "Sex as a Weapon" (7) | |
| Genesis | 1987 | "Land of Confusion" (7) | |
| Steve Winwood | "Higher Love" (7) | ||
| U2 | "With or Without You" (7) | ||
| Madonna | 1989 | "Express Yourself" (5); "Like a Prayer" (2) | |
| C+C Music Factory | 1991 | "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)" (6); "Things That Make You Go Hmmm..." (1) | |
| Chris Isaak | "Wicked Game" (7) | ||
| Van Halen | 1992 | "Right Now" (7) | |
| R.E.M. | 1994 | "Everybody Hurts" (7) | |
| Beck | 1997 | "Devils Haircut" (2); "The New Pollution" (5) | |
| Eminem | 2000 | "Forgot About Dre" (1); "The Real Slim Shady" (6) | |
| Shakira | 2002 | "Whenever, Wherever" (7) | |
| Justin Timberlake | 2003 | "Cry Me a River" (5); "Rock Your Body" (2) | |
| Red Hot Chili Peppers | 2006 | "Dani California" (7) | |
| Shakira | "Hips Don't Lie" (7) | ||
| Beyoncé | 2007 | "Beautiful Liar" (4); Female Artist of the Year; "Irreplaceable" (1); Quadruple Threat of the Year (for Beyoncé) | |
| Justin Timberlake | "Let Me Talk to You/My Love" (1); Male Artist of the Year (for Timberlake); Quadruple Threat of the Year (for Timberlake); "SexyBack" (1); "What Goes Around... Comes Around" (3) | ||
| Britney Spears | 2009 | "Circus" (5); "Womanizer" (2) | |
| Adele | 2011 | "Rolling in the Deep" (7) | |
| Eminem | 2014 | "Berzerk" (1); "The Monster" (3); "Rap God" (3) | |
| Drake | 2016 | "Hotline Bling" (4); "One Dance" (1); "Work" (2) | |
| Childish Gambino | 2018 | "This Is America" (7) | |
| Halsey | 2019 | Artist of the Year (for Halsey); "Boy with Luv" (4); "Nightmare" (2) | |
| The Weeknd | 2020 | Artist of the Year (for The Weeknd); "Blinding Lights" (6) | |
| BTS | 2021 | Best Group (for BTS); "Butter" (5); "Dynamite" (1); | |
| Giveon | Best New Artist (for Giveon); "Heartbreak Anniversary" (2); "Peaches" (4) | ||
| Megan Thee Stallion | Artist of the Year (for Stallion); "On Me (Remix)" (1); "Thot Shit" (1); "WAP" (4) | ||
| Drake | 2022 | Artist of the Year (for Drake); Certified Lover Boy (1); "Wait for U" (2); "Way 2 Sexy" (3) | |
| Kendrick Lamar | "Family Ties" (3); "The Heart Part 5" (2); "N95" (2) | ||
| Lil Nas X | Artist of the Year (for Lil Nas X); "Industry Baby" (6) | ||
| Megan Thee Stallion | 2024 | "Boa" (4); "Mamushi" (1); "Wanna Be" (2) | |
| Sabrina Carpenter | Artist of the Year (for Carpenter); Best Pop (for Carpenter); "Espresso" (2); "Please Please Please" (3) | ||
| Ariana Grande | Artist of the Year (for Grande); "The Boy Is Mine" (1); "We Can't Be Friends (Wait for Your Love)" (5) | ||
| 2025 | Best Pop Artist (for Grande); Brighter Days Ahead (6) | ||
| The Weeknd | Artist of the Year (for The Weeknd); Hurry Up Tomorrow (album)(1); Hurry Up Tomorrow (film)(2); "Timeless" (3) | ||
| The Cars | 1984 | 6 | "You Might Think" (6) |
| Michael Jackson | "Thriller" (6) | ||
| ZZ Top | "Gimme All Your Lovin'" (1); "Legs" (2); "Sharp Dressed Man" (3) | ||
| Bryan Adams | 1985 | "Heaven (version 2)" (1); "Run to You" (5) | |
| ZZ Top | 1986 | "Rough Boy" (6) | |
| Madonna | 1987 | "Open Your Heart" (3); "Papa Don't Preach" (3) | |
| Paul Simon | "The Boy in the Bubble" (5); "You Can Call Me Al" (1) | ||
| Jody Watley | 1989 | "Real Love" (6) | |
| Steve Winwood | "Roll with It" (6) | ||
| Paula Abdul | "Straight Up" (6) | ||
| 1990 | "Opposites Attract" (6) | ||
| Don Henley | "The End of the Innocence" (6) | ||
| Sinéad O'Connor | "Nothing Compares 2 U" (6) | ||
| Deee-Lite | 1991 | "Groove Is in the Heart" (6) | |
| En Vogue | 1992 | "My Lovin' (You're Never Gonna Get It)" (6) | |
| Aerosmith | 1993 | "Livin' on the Edge" (6) | |
| Peter Gabriel | "Digging in the Dirt" (3); "Steam" (3) | ||
| R.E.M. | "Man on the Moon" (6) | ||
| Björk | 1994 | "Human Behaviour" (6) | |
| 1996 | "It's Oh So Quiet" (6) | ||
| Alanis Morissette | "Ironic" (6) | ||
| Will Smith | 1998 | "Gettin' Jiggy wit It" (5); "Just the Two of Us" (1) | |
| 1999 | "Miami" (3); "Wild Wild West" (3) | ||
| TLC | "No Scrubs" (6) | ||
| NSYNC | 2000 | "Bye Bye Bye" (6) | |
| 2001 | "Pop" (6) | ||
| Christina Aguilera, Lil' Kim, Mýa, & Pink | "Lady Marmalade" (6) | ||
| Dido | "Stan" (5); "Thank You" (1) | ||
| Missy Elliott | "Get Ur Freak On" (6) | ||
| 2002 | "One Minute Man (Remix)" (6) | ||
| Eminem | "Without Me" (6) | ||
| P.O.D. | "Alive" (5); "Youth of the Nation" (1) | ||
| Johnny Cash | 2003 | "Hurt" (6) | |
| Jay-Z | 2004 | "99 Problems" (6) | |
| Gwen Stefani | 2005 | "Hollaback Girl" (4); "What You Waiting For?" (2) | |
| Missy Elliott | "Lose Control" (6) | ||
| The Pussycat Dolls | 2008 | "When I Grow Up" (6) | |
| Kanye West | 2011 | "All of the Lights" (4); "Power" (2) | |
| Justin Timberlake | 2013 | "Mirrors" (4); "Suit & Tie" (2) | |
| Macklemore and Ryan Lewis | "Can't Hold Us" (4); "Same Love" (1); "Thrift Shop" (1) | ||
| Ed Sheeran | 2015 | "Don't" (2); "Thinking Out Loud" (4) | |
| Bruno Mars | 2018 | Artist of the Year (for Mars); "Finesse (Remix)" (5) | |
| Jonas Brothers | 2019 | Artist of the Year (for Jonas Brothers); Best Group (for Jonas Brothers); "Sucker" (4) | |
| Shawn Mendes | Artist of the Year (for Mendes); "Señorita" (5) | ||
| Taylor Swift | 2020 | "Cardigan" (1); "Lover" (2); "The Man" (3) | |
| Billie Eilish | "All the Good Girls Go to Hell" (3); "Everything I Wanted" (2); "Xanny" (1) | ||
| 2021 | "Happier Than Ever" (1); "Lo Vas a Olvidar" (1); "Therefore I Am" (2); "Your Power" (2) | ||
| Cardi B | "Rumors" (1); "WAP" (4); "Wild Side" (1) | ||
| Doja Cat | Artist of the Year (for Doja Cat); "Best Friend" (1); "Kiss Me More" (2); "Need to Know" (1); "You Right" (1) | ||
| Lil Nas X | "Industry Baby" (1); "Montero (Call Me by Your Name)" (5) | ||
| Olivia Rodrigo | Artist of the Year (for Rodrigo); Best New Artist (for Rodrigo); "Drivers License" (2); "Good 4 U" (2) | ||
| Billie Eilish | 2022 | "Happier Than Ever" (4); Happier Than Ever (1); Happier Than Ever: A Love Letter to Los Angeles (1) | |
| Blackpink | 2023 | Best Group (for Blackpink); Born Pink World Tour (1); "Pink Venom" (4) | |
| Doja Cat | Artist of the Year (for Doja Cat); "Attention" (3); "I Like You (A Happier Song)" (1); "Paint the Town Red" (1) | ||
| Miley Cyrus | Endless Summer Vacation (1); "Flowers" (4); "River" (1) | ||
| Nicki Minaj | Artist of the Year (for Minaj); "Barbie World" (1); "Love in the Way" (1); "Super Freaky Girl" (3) | ||
| Olivia Rodrigo | "Vampire" (6) | ||
| SZA | 2024 | Artist of the Year (for SZA); "Rich Baby Daddy" (2); "Saturn" (1); "Snooze" (2) | |
| Billie Eilish | 2025 | "Birds of a Feather" (2); "Guess" (4) | |
| Tate McRae | Best Pop Artist (for McRae); "Just Keep Watching" (3); "Sports Car" (1); "What I Want" (1) | ||
| Billy Idol | 1984 | 5 | "Dancing with Myself" (3); "Eye Without a Face" (2) |
| Eurythmics | 1985 | "Would I Lie to You?" (5) | |
| Madonna | "Like a Virgin" (3); "Material Girl" (2) | ||
| Tom Petty | "Don't Come Around Here No More" (5) | ||
| Robert Palmer | 1986 | "Addicted to Love" (5) | |
| Talking Heads | "And She Was" (2); "Road to Nowhere" (3) | ||
| X | "Burning House of Love" (5) | ||
| Eurythmics | 1987 | "Missionary Man" (5) | |
| Bruce Springsteen | 1988 | "Tunnel of Love" (5) | |
| MC Hammer | 1990 | "U Can't Touch This" (5) | |
| George Michael | 1991 | "Freedom! '90" (5) | |
| Queensrÿche | "Silent Lucidity" (5) | ||
| Seal | "Crazy" (5) | ||
| Pearl Jam | 1993 | "Jeremy" (5) | |
| Beastie Boys | 1994 | "Sabotage" (5) | |
| Nirvana | "Heart-Shaped Box" (5) | ||
| Weezer | 1995 | "Buddy Holly" (5) | |
| Bone Thugs-n-Harmony | 1996 | "Tha Crossroads" (5) | |
| Coolio | "1, 2, 3, 4 (Sumpin' New)" (2); "Gangsta's Paradise" (3) | ||
| Foo Fighters | "Big Me" (5) | ||
| Nine Inch Nails | 1997 | "The Perfect Drug" (5) | |
| Busta Rhymes | 1999 | "Gimme Some More" (1); "What's It Gonna Be?!" (4) | |
| Jennifer Lopez | Best Artist Website; "If You Had My Love" (4) | ||
| Lauryn Hill | "Doo Wop (That Thing)" (5) | ||
| Christina Aguilera | 2000 | "What a Girl Wants" (5) | |
| Metallica | "I Disappear" (5) | ||
| Red Hot Chili Peppers | "Californication" (5) | ||
| Sisqó | "Thong Song" (4); "Thong Song" (Remix)(1) | ||
| Destiny's Child | 2001 | "Independent Women Part I" (2); "Survivor" (3) | |
| Eminem | "Stan" (5) | ||
| U2 | "Beautiful Day" (1); "Elevation (Tomb Raider Mix)" (4) | ||
| Enrique Iglesias | 2002 | "Escape" (1); "Hero" (4) | |
| 50 Cent | 2003 | "In da Club" (5) | |
| Eminem | "Lose Yourself" (5) | ||
| Beyoncé | 2004 | "Me, Myself and I" (1); "Naughty Girl" (4) | |
| No Doubt | "It's My Life" (5) | ||
| OutKast | "Hey Ya!" (5) | ||
| Usher | "Burn" (1); "Yeah!" (4) | ||
| My Chemical Romance | 2005 | "Helena" (5) | |
| U2 | "Vertigo" (5) | ||
| Madonna | 2006 | "Hung Up" (5) | |
| Panic! at the Disco | "I Write Sins Not Tragedies" (5) | ||
| Kanye West | 2007 | Male Artist of the Year (for West); Quadruple Threat of the Year (for West); "Stronger" (3) | |
| Chris Brown | 2008 | "Forever" (3); "Kiss Kiss" (1); "With You" (1) | |
| Katy Perry | "I Kissed a Girl" (5) | ||
| Beyoncé | 2010 | "Video Phone (Extended Remix)" (5) | |
| B.o.B | "Airplanes" (4); "Nothin' on You" (1) | ||
| Drake | 2012 | "HYFR" (1); "Take Care" (4) | |
| Rihanna | "We Found Love" (3); "Where Have You Been" (2) | ||
| Charli XCX | 2014 | "Boom Clap" (1); "Fancy" (4) | |
| Beyoncé | 2015 | "7/11" (5) | |
| Mark Ronson | "Uptown Funk" (5) | ||
| Ariana Grande | 2016 | "Into You" (4); "Let Me Love You" (1) | |
| Rihanna | "This Is What You Came For" (3); "Work" (2) | ||
| DJ Khaled | 2017 | "I'm the One" (1); "Wild Thoughts" (4) | |
| Katy Perry | "Bon Appétit" (1); "Chained to the Rhythm" (3); "Feels" (1) | ||
| The Weeknd | Artist of the Year (for The Weeknd); "Reminder" (4) | ||
| Ariana Grande | 2018 | Artist of the Year (for Grande); "No Tears Left to Cry" (4) | |
| Camila Cabello | Artist of the Year (for Cabello); "Havana" (4) | ||
| 2019 | "Señorita" (5) | ||
| BTS | Best Group (for BTS); "Boy with Luv" (4) | ||
| Cardi B | Artist of the Year (for Cardi B); "Money" (1); "Please Me" (1); "Taki Taki" (1); "Wish Wish" (1) | ||
| J Balvin | "Con Altura" (3); "I Can't Get Enough" (1); "Say My Name" (1) | ||
| DaBaby | 2020 | Artist of the Year (for DaBaby); "Bop" (2); "My Oh My" (1); "Rockstar" (1) | |
| Drake | "Life Is Good" (3); "Popstar" (1); "Toosie Slide" (1) | ||
| Megan Thee Stallion | Artist of the Year (for Stallion); "Savage" (2); "Savage (Remix) (1)"; "WAP" (1) | ||
| Roddy Ricch | Best New Artist (for Ricch); "The Box" (2); "Rockstar" (1); "The Woo" (1) | ||
| Dua Lipa | "Break My Heart" (1); "Don't Start Now" (1); "Physical" (3) | ||
| 2021 | "Levitating" (2); "Prisoner" (2); "Un Dia (One Day)" (1) | ||
| Drake | "Laugh Now Cry Later" (2); "Popstar" (2); "What's Next" (1) | ||
| BTS | 2022 | Best Group (for BTS); Best Metaverse Performance; "My Universe" (1); "Permission to Dance" (1); "Yet to Come (The Most Beautiful Moment)" (1) | |
| Dua Lipa | "Cold Heart (Pnau remix)" (2); "Sweetest Pie" (3) | ||
| Ed Sheeran | Artist of the Year (for Sheeran); "Bam Bam" (1); "Shivers" (3) | ||
| Future | "Wait for U" (2); "Way 2 Sexy" (3) | ||
| Lizzo | Artist of the Year (for Lizzo); "About Damn Time" (4) | ||
| Taylor Swift | All Too Well: The Short Film (5) | ||
| The Weeknd | "La Fama" (1); "One Right Now" (1); "Out of Time" (1); "Take My Breath" (1); "Tears in the Club" (1) | ||
| Sam Smith & Kim Petras | 2023 | "Unholy" (5) | |
| Charli XCX | 2025 | Best Pop Artist (for Charli XCX); "Guess" (4) |
Most nominations for a single video
| Artist(s) | Year | Number of nominations | Music video |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dire Straits | 1986 | 11 | "Money for Nothing" |
| Michael Jackson & Janet Jackson | 1995 | "Scream" | |
| Peter Gabriel | 1987 | 10 | "Sledgehammer" |
| TLC | 1995 | "Waterfalls" | |
| Jamiroquai | 1997 | "Virtual Insanity" | |
| Lady Gaga | 2010 | "Bad Romance" | |
| Madonna | 1990 | 9 | "Vogue" |
| R.E.M. | 1991 | "Losing My Religion" | |
| Green Day | 1995 | "Basket Case" | |
| Korn | 1999 | "Freak on a Leash" | |
| Ricky Martin | "Livin' la Vida Loca" | ||
| Fatboy Slim | 2001 | "Weapon of Choice" | |
| Beyoncé | 2009 | "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)" | |
| Taylor Swift | 2019 | "You Need to Calm Down" | |
| Taylor Swift (featuring Post Malone) | 2024 | "Fortnight" | |
| Herbie Hancock | 1984 | 8 | "Rockit" |
| The Police | "Every Breath You Take" | ||
| A-ha | 1986 | "Take On Me" | |
| INXS | 1988 | "Need You Tonight / Mediate" | |
| Aerosmith | 1990 | "Janie's Got a Gun" | |
| En Vogue | 1993 | "Free Your Mind" | |
| The Smashing Pumpkins | 1996 | "Tonight, Tonight" | |
| Madonna | 1998 | "Ray of Light" | |
| Garbage | "Push It" | ||
| Missy Elliott | 2003 | "Work It" | |
| Eminem | 2010 | "Not Afraid" | |
| Taylor Swift (featuring Kendrick Lamar) | 2015 | "Bad Blood" | |
| The Carters | 2018 | "Apeshit" | |
| Lil Nas X (featuring Billy Ray Cyrus) | 2019 | "Old Town Road (Remix)" | |
| Don Henley | 1985 | 7 | "The Boys of Summer" |
| Pat Benatar | 1986 | "Sex as a Weapon" | |
| Genesis | 1987 | "Land of Confusion" | |
| Steve Winwood | "Higher Love" | ||
| U2 | "With or Without You" | ||
| Chris Isaak | 1991 | "Wicked Game" | |
| Van Halen | 1992 | "Right Now" | |
| R.E.M. | 1994 | "Everybody Hurts" | |
| Shakira | 2002 | "Whenever, Wherever" | |
| 2006 | "Hips Don't Lie" | ||
| Red Hot Chili Peppers | "Dani California" | ||
| Adele | 2011 | "Rolling in the Deep" | |
| 2016 | "Hello" | ||
| Kendrick Lamar | 2017 | "Humble." | |
| Childish Gambino | 2018 | "This Is America" | |
| Lady Gaga & Ariana Grande | 2020 | "Rain on Me" | |
| Taylor Swift | 2023 | "Anti-Hero" | |
| Rosé & Bruno Mars | 2025 | "Apt." | |
| Kendrick Lamar | "Not Like Us" | ||
| Sabrina Carpenter | "Manchild" | ||
| The Cars | 1984 | 6 | "You Might Think" |
| Cyndi Lauper | "Girls Just Want to Have Fun" | ||
| Michael Jackson | "Thriller" | ||
| ZZ Top | 1986 | "Rough Boy" | |
| George Harrison | 1988 | "When We Was Fab" | |
| Michael Jackson | 1989 | "Leave Me Alone" | |
| Jody Watley | "Real Love" | ||
| Steve Winwood | "Roll with It" | ||
| Paula Abdul | "Straight Up" | ||
| 1990 | "Opposites Attract" | ||
| Don Henley | "The End of the Innocence" | ||
| Sinéad O'Connor | "Nothing Compares 2 U" | ||
| C+C Music Factory | 1991 | "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)" | |
| Deee-Lite | "Groove Is in the Heart" | ||
| Red Hot Chili Peppers | 1992 | "Give It Away" | |
| En Vogue | "My Lovin' (You're Never Gonna Get It)" | ||
| Aerosmith | 1993 | "Livin' on the Edge" | |
| R.E.M. | "Man on the Moon" | ||
| Björk | 1994 | "Human Behaviour" | |
| 1996 | "It's Oh So Quiet" | ||
| Alanis Morissette | "Ironic" | ||
| TLC | 1999 | "No Scrubs" | |
| Eminem | 2000 | "The Real Slim Shady" | |
| NSYNC | "Bye Bye Bye" | ||
| 2001 | "Pop" | ||
| Christina Aguilera, Lil' Kim, Mýa and Pink (featuring Missy Elliott) | "Lady Marmalade" | ||
| Missy Elliott | "Get Ur Freak On" | ||
| 2002 | "One Minute Man (Remix)" | ||
| Eminem | "Without Me" | ||
| Johnny Cash | 2003 | "Hurt" | |
| Jay-Z | 2004 | "99 Problems" | |
| Green Day | 2005 | "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" | |
| Missy Elliott | "Lose Control" | ||
| The Pussycat Dolls | 2008 | "When I Grow Up" | |
| Beyoncé | 2016 | "Formation" | |
| The Weeknd | 2020 | "Blinding Lights" | |
| Lil Nas X & Jack Harlow | 2022 | "Industry Baby" | |
| Olivia Rodrigo | 2023 | "Vampire" | |
| Eminem | 2024 | "Houdini" | |
| Ariana Grande | 2025 | Brighter Days Ahead | |
| Lady Gaga | "Abracadabra" | ||
| Bryan Adams | 1985 | 5 | "Run to You" |
| David Lee Roth | "Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody" | ||
| Eurythmics | "Would I Lie to You?" | ||
| Tom Petty | "Don't Come Around Here No More" | ||
| Robert Palmer | 1986 | "Addicted to Love" | |
| X | "Burning House of Love" | ||
| Eurythmics | 1987 | "Missionary Man" | |
| Paul Simon | "The Boy in the Bubble" | ||
| Bruce Springsteen | 1988 | "Tunnel of Love" | |
| Madonna | 1989 | "Express Yourself" | |
| MC Hammer | 1990 | "U Can't Touch This" | |
| George Michael | 1991 | "Freedom! '90" | |
| Queensrÿche | "Silent Lucidity" | ||
| Seal | "Crazy" | ||
| Pearl Jam | 1993 | "Jeremy" | |
| Aerosmith | 1994 | "Amazing" | |
| Beastie Boys | "Sabotage" | ||
| Nirvana | "Heart-Shaped Box" | ||
| Weezer | 1995 | "Buddy Holly" | |
| Bone Thugs-n-Harmony | 1996 | "Tha Crossroads" | |
| Foo Fighters | "Big Me" | ||
| Beck | 1997 | "The New Pollution" | |
| Nine Inch Nails | "The Perfect Drug" | ||
| Will Smith | 1998 | "Gettin' Jiggy wit It" | |
| Lauryn Hill | 1999 | "Doo Wop (That Thing)" | |
| Christina Aguilera | 2000 | "What a Girl Wants" | |
| Metallica | "I Disappear" | ||
| Red Hot Chili Peppers | "Californication" | ||
| Eminem (featuring Dido) | 2001 | "Stan" | |
| P.O.D. | 2002 | "Alive" | |
| 50 Cent | 2003 | "In da Club" | |
| Eminem | "Lose Yourself" | ||
| Justin Timberlake | "Cry Me a River" | ||
| No Doubt | 2004 | "It's My Life" | |
| OutKast | "Hey Ya!" | ||
| My Chemical Romance | 2005 | "Helena" | |
| U2 | "Vertigo" | ||
| Madonna | 2006 | "Hung Up" | |
| Panic! at the Disco | "I Write Sins Not Tragedies" | ||
| Katy Perry | 2008 | "I Kissed a Girl" | |
| Britney Spears | 2009 | "Circus" | |
| Lady Gaga | "Paparazzi" | ||
| Beyoncé | 2010 | "Video Phone (Extended Remix)" | |
| Katy Perry | 2011 | "E.T." | |
| Beyoncé | 2015 | "7/11" | |
| Mark Ronson (featuring Bruno Mars) | "Uptown Funk" | ||
| Bruno Mars (featuring Cardi B) | 2018 | "Finesse (Remix)" | |
| Drake | "God's Plan" | ||
| Ariana Grande | 2019 | "Thank U, Next" | |
| Billie Eilish | "Bad Guy" | ||
| Shawn Mendes & Camila Cabello | "Señorita" | ||
| BTS | 2021 | "Butter" | |
| Lil Nas X | "Montero (Call Me by Your Name)" | ||
| Harry Styles | 2022 | "As It Was" | |
| Taylor Swift | All Too Well: The Short Film | ||
| Sam Smith & Kim Petras | 2023 | "Unholy" | |
| SZA | "Kill Bill" | ||
| Ariana Grande | 2024 | "We Can't Be Friends (Wait for Your Love)" |
Performances
Pre-Show
| Year | Performers |
|---|---|
| 1995 | Silverchair |
| 1996 | Beck • No Doubt |
| 1997 | Foo Fighters • The Mighty Mighty Bosstones |
| 1998 | Usher • Barenaked Ladies |
| 1999 | Smash Mouth • Blink-182 |
| 2000 | Papa Roach |
| 2001 | Alien Ant Farm • City High (feat. Eve) |
| 2002 | Avril Lavigne • Ludacris (feat. I-20 & Shawnna) |
| 2003 | Sean Paul • Black Eyed Peas |
| 2004 | Jadakiss (feat Anthony Hamilton) • Ashlee Simpson • New Found Glory |
| 2005 | Mike Jones (feat. Slim Thug & Paul Wall) • Rihanna • Fall Out Boy |
| 2006 | Fergie • My Chemical Romance |
| 2007 | Nicole Scherzinger (feat. Lil Wayne) |
| 2008 | Dance-off Performance: Fanny Pak vs. Kaba Modern |
| 2009 | N/a |
| 2010 | Nicki Minaj (feat. will.i.am) |
| 2011 | Cobra Starship (feat. Sabi) |
| 2012 | Demi Lovato |
| 2013 | Austin Mahone • Ariana Grande |
| 2014 | Fifth Harmony • Charli XCX |
| 2015 | Walk The Moon • Todrick Hall • Nick Jonas |
| 2016 | Alessia Cara (feat. Troye Sivan) • Jidenna • Lukas Graham |
| 2017 | Cardi B • Bleachers • Khalid |
| 2018 | Bazzi • Bryce Vine • Backstreet Boys |
| 2019 | Ava Max • CNCO • Megan Thee Stallion |
| 2020 | Jack Harlow • Tate McRae • Chloe x Halle • Lewis Capaldi • Machine Gun Kelley (feat. Blackbear & Travis Barker) |
| 2021 | Polo G • Kim Petras • Swedish House Mafia |
| 2022 | Saucy Santana • Yung Gravy • Dove Cameron |
| 2023 | NLE Choppa • Sabrina Carpenter |
| 2024 | Le Sserafim |
| 2025 | KATSEYE |
Main Show
| Year | Performers (chronologically) |
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See also
- MTV Asia Awards
- MTV Europe Music Awards
- MTV Video Music Awards Japan
- MTV Video Music Brasil
- MTV 500
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