The discography of SS 501, a South Korean boy band formed by DSP Media in 2005, consists of releases in both the Korean and Japanese music markets. The body of work includes full‑length studio albums, extended plays (EPs), single albums, digital singles, compilation albums, and various Japanese‑market releases such as full albums, mini‑albums, and singles.
Korean releases
| Type | Number of releases | Notable titles (chronological) |
|---|---|---|
| Studio albums | 2 | S.T 01 Now (2006), S.T 2 The Miracle (2008) |
| Extended plays (EPs) / mini‑albums | 4 | Snow Prince (2005), Unlock (2006), Deja Vu (2007), U R Man (single album, 2008) |
| Single albums / digital singles | 6 | “Warning” (2005), “Because I’m Stupid” (2005), “Love Like This” (2006), “A Song To… (Jaejoong, Yoochun, & Hyunsick)”, “Crazy Beautiful* (2009) |
| Compilation albums | 2 | SS 501 Solo Collection (2009), SS 501 Museum (2010) |
Japanese releases
| Type | Number of releases | Notable titles (chronological) |
|---|---|---|
| Studio albums | 2 | SS 501 (2007), All My Love (2009) |
| Mini‑albums / EPs | 2 | Lucky Days (2008), U R Man (Japanese version, 2009) |
| Singles | 6 | “Kokoro” (2007), “Distance” (2007), “Lucky Days” (2008), “Love You More” (2009), “Lucky Game” (2009), “Love Play” (2010) |
| DVD & visual releases | Several | Concert DVDs such as SS 501 1st Concert: ‘A Live’ (2006) and SS 501 2nd Concert: ‘Dream‑I (2009) |
Overview
- Active period for releases: 2005 – 2010 (the group entered an indefinite hiatus in 2010, though individual members have pursued solo activities).
- Language of releases: Primarily Korean for domestic releases; Japanese for the group’s activities in Japan.
- Record labels: DSP Media (Korea) and Pony Canyon (Japan) for the Japanese market.
The discography reflects the group’s evolution from a debut single “Warning” to full studio productions and extensive promotion in Japan, a common trajectory for K‑pop acts during the mid‑2000s. Accurate and detailed catalogues of each release—including exact release dates, track listings, and chart positions—are documented in music industry databases and the group’s official archives.