Artist
BeyoncΓ©
WINS*
35
NOMINATIONS*
99
67th Annual GRAMMY Awards
Through the 2026 GRAMMY Awards
We all experience pain and loss, and often we become inaudible. My intention for [Lemonade] was to create a body of work that would give a voice to our pain, our struggles, our darkness, and our history. To confront issues that make us uncomfortable.
Born BeyoncΓ© Giselle Knowles on Sept. 4, 1981, in Houston
BeyoncΓ© initially rose to prominence as a member of Destiny's Child. The trio scored two No. 1 hits in 1999 with "Bills, Bills, Bills" and "Say My Name" from their Top 5 album The Writing's On The Wall. In 2003, BeyoncΓ© released her debut solo album, Dangerously In Love, which topped the Billboard 200 and spawned the No. 1 hits "Crazy In Love" (a duet with Jay-Z) and "Baby Boy."
She won her first three career GRAMMYs with Destiny's Child, including Best R&B Performance By A Duo Or Group for "Survivor." She won five awards as a solo artist at the 46th GRAMMY Awards, including Best Contemporary R&B Album for Dangerously In Love.
She made her GRAMMY stage debut with Destiny's Child at the 43rd GRAMMYs in 2001, performing a medley of "Independent Women, Part I" and "Say My Name." Alongside Prince at the 46th GRAMMY Awards in 2004, BeyoncΓ© performed a medley that included his "Purple Rain" and her "Crazy In Love."
At the 65th GRAMMY Awards in 2023, BeyoncΓ© made history by becoming the artist with the most GRAMMY wins ever at that time, reaching 32 total GRAMMYs. As of the 2025 GRAMMYs, BeyoncΓ© now holds 35 GRAMMY wins and 99 nominations, making her both the most-awarded and most-nominated artist in GRAMMY history. She surpassed her previous tie with her husband, Jay-Z, who for a time shared the top spot for nominations.
