The ‘Everything Hallelujah’ trend has taken over Instagram and TikTok this week, with users tacking “hallelujah” onto small daily wins after Justin Bieber’s song surged back into the spotlight by Wednesday, 24 June 2026.
The song, Everything Hallelujah, comes from Bieber’s 2025 album SWAG II, but it only exploded as a format after his Coachella set earlier this year, as reported by Yahoo Entertainment.
Within about 48 hours it was everywhere across TikTok, Instagram and X.
Bieber’s Coachella appearance was already a talking point as one of his bigger live moments in a while, and slipping the song into the set turned a single performance into a format millions could copy.
Clips of the set kept the audio circulating long after the festival wrapped.
How the Everything Hallelujah trend works
The format could not be simpler. People list the ordinary moments they are grateful for and punctuate each one with the word “hallelujah”, set to the Bieber track.
A cancelled meeting, a perfectly ripe avocado or a quiet morning all qualify, which is exactly why it spread so fast.
The lyric doing the heavy lifting is the cheerful “brush my teeth, hallelujah”, a throwaway line that captured the whole mood of finding joy in tiny, unglamorous wins.
That low-stakes, feel-good energy is part of why brands and casual users alike jumped on it.
Which celebrities joined in
Plenty of famous names have leaned into the moment. Kylie Jenner, Lewis Capaldi and James Charles have all shared their own gratitude lists, and even the White House posted a version, a sign of just how far the trend has travelled beyond Bieber’s core fanbase.
Part of the appeal is how warm and low-effort it feels at a noisy time online. Instead of a dance or a challenge, the trend asks people to simply notice good things, which lands well with users tired of more demanding formats and happy to share something gentle.
For Bieber, the timing is a quiet win of its own. A track from an album that was already out has been handed a second life, pushing his music back to the top of trending audio charts without him having to release anything new.
Audio trends tend to burn bright and fade fast, so the real test is whether Everything Hallelujah sticks around once the next viral sound arrives. For now it keeps climbing the charts, and any fresh Bieber move would only pour more fuel on a format that is already everywhere.







