For Artists

How to Get Gigs in the UK: The Complete Musician’s GuideFrom your first open mic to a sustainable live career — real numbers, outreach templates, and the booking system nobody explains

TL;DR — the gigging playbook

The real bottleneck is access, not talent. There are 835 grassroots venues in the UK and thousands more pubs hosting live music. Build an EPK that converts (live video, 2-sentence bio, 3 photos). Approach 5 venues per week with a short, specific email. Play 5–10 open mics in 2 months to build a local network. The MU floor is £167.16/musician — never go below it. You do not need an agent until you are clearing £500+ per gig consistently.

Booking lead time: 2–6 weeks for pubs, 6–12 months for weddings. Budget your first 3 months as an investment — it compounds.

UK Grassroots Venues
835 (MVT census)
The Music Venue Trust tracks 835 grassroots music venues across the UK. 125 closed permanently in 2023 alone — roughly 1 every 3 days. The stages exist, but the window is narrowing.
MU Floor
£167.16/musician
The Musicians’ Union recommended minimum for a pub or club engagement of up to 3 hours. A useful floor when negotiating — but working acts on the wedding circuit clear £800–£1,800 for a 4-piece.
Booking Lead Time
2–6 weeks pubs, 6–12 months weddings
Pub gigs book 2–6 weeks out. Festivals 3–9 months. Weddings 6–12 months, sometimes 18 for peak summer Saturdays. Approach in January for spring/summer dates.
Key metric: match your outreach timing to the gig type

If you are a musician in the UK trying to get gigs, you have probably heard the same advice a hundred times: network more, email venues, hustle harder. Some of that is useful. Most of it is vague. And almost none of it addresses the real bottleneck — the live music booking system in this country is still fundamentally built on who you know, not how good you are.

I have been gigging since 2009 — over 15 years on the UK circuit — and I built GigXchange specifically because I got tired of watching talented artists struggle to get booked while less talented ones with better connections played every weekend. The UK Music sector employs 216,000 people and generates billions in live revenue, yet the grassroots booking layer — where most careers start — still runs on Facebook messages and word of mouth.

This guide covers everything: from your very first open mic through to deciding whether you need a booking agent. It is written for independent artists — the solo acts, duos, and bands who do not have management or agency backing. The ones doing it themselves.

1. Getting Started: The Real Bottleneck

The biggest mistake I see artists make is treating the booking process as an afterthought. They spend months perfecting their sound and then wonder why nobody is calling. The artists who stay busy are not always the best musicians — they are the ones who have worked out how to make it easy for venues to say yes.

The UK has 835 grassroots music venues in the Music Venue Trust network, and thousands more pubs, bars, hotels, and restaurants that host live music at least once a week. There is no shortage of stages. There is a shortage of systematic access to them.

The traditional route — know someone who knows the booker — works, but it is slow and unevenly distributed. Artists in major cities have more venues within 30 minutes, but also face 10 times the competition. Artists in smaller towns have fewer options but can become the go-to act for 3–5 local rooms within a few months if they approach it properly.

Here is the mindset shift: treat your booking pipeline as seriously as your setlist. Dedicate 2–3 hours per week to outreach, follow-ups, and profile maintenance. The artists who do this consistently for 3 months end up with more offers than they can accept. For a deeper breakdown of what actually moves the needle, read our editorial on getting more gigs as an independent artist.

2. Booking Your First Gig

Everyone remembers their first gig. Mine was terrible — wrong venue, wrong audience, and I did not know what a soundcheck was. But it led to the second one, which led to the third, and eventually to a decade on the circuit.

The hardest part of your first booking is not the performance. It is cutting through the noise and getting a venue to give you a slot when you have no track record. Here is the approach that works:

  1. Research 5 venues that book your genre. Check their social media for recent live music posts. If the last gig they promoted was 6 months ago, they are not actively booking. Focus on venues with a weekly live night.
  2. Find the booker’s name and email. Not the general enquiry address — the actual person who books the music. Check the venue’s website, Facebook About section, or call and ask. A named email converts at roughly 3 times the rate of “info@”.
  3. Send a short, specific message. 4–6 sentences maximum: who you are, what you play (genre + set length), a link to your best live video clip (under 3 minutes), and a suggested date range. Do not attach files — venue bookers open links, not attachments.
  4. Follow up once after 7 days. A polite “just checking this landed” email. If no reply after the follow-up, move on. The hit rate on cold outreach is roughly 1 in 10 — that is normal, not a rejection of your talent.
  5. Accept the first offer, even if the fee is low. Your first gig is not about money. It is about getting a live reference, photos, and a venue you can name-drop in your next outreach. After 3–5 gigs, your conversion rate on approaches roughly doubles.

If you want a head start, list yourself on GigXchange Profiles so venues can find you by genre, city, and budget. Profiles with live video and at least 1 review convert at 3–5 times the rate of empty ones. For outreach templates you can copy and customise, see our venue outreach templates.

3. Building a Profile That Converts

Your online profile is your first audition. Every venue owner, promoter, and agent does the same thing before responding to your message: they look at your profile. Your photos, bio, media, and reviews — that is what determines whether they book you or scroll past.

The 5 elements of an effective EPK

  1. 2-sentence bio. State your act type, genre, typical set length, and location. “London-based acoustic duo playing folk and Americana. 2 × 45-minute sets, own PA.” That is enough. Bookers skim — they are not reading your life story.
  2. 1 live video clip under 3 minutes. Shot at a real gig with a real audience. Phone footage is fine if the audio is decent. This single asset does more for your conversion rate than everything else combined.
  3. 3 professional photos. 1 live performance shot, 1 headshot or group shot, 1 promo image. Not selfies. Not rehearsal room snaps. If budget is tight, ask a friend with a decent phone to shoot 50 photos at your next gig — 3 will be usable.
  4. Previous venues or notable gigs. Even 3–5 venue names gives a booker social proof. If you have not played anywhere yet, skip this and focus on getting your first 3 gigs as fast as possible.
  5. Clear contact details or a booking link. Make it stupidly easy for someone to book you. If they have to hunt for your email, you have already lost most enquiries.

Fill in every field on every platform you are listed on. An incomplete profile signals you are not serious about getting booked. Compare how top-performing artists present themselves on the GigXchange Profiles page — the patterns are consistent.

4. Approaching Venues: What Actually Works

Cold outreach is a numbers game with a learnable skill component. The hit rate improves dramatically once you stop sending generic messages and start being specific about what you offer and why that venue is a fit.

The outreach formula

Specific compliment + who you are + what you play + proof + ask.

“Hi [Name], I saw you had [Artist] playing last Thursday — looked like a great night. I’m [Your Name], a [genre] [act type] based in [City]. I play 2 × 45-minute sets of [brief description] and bring my own PA. Here’s a clip from a recent gig at [Venue]: [link]. I’d love to play at [Venue Name] — are you booking for [month]?”

That is 5 sentences. It tells the booker everything they need to decide whether to click the link. Most musicians send 3 paragraphs about their journey and forget to include a video. Do not be that person.

Where to find venue contacts

  • GigXchange Gig Directory — browse live gigs by city, see which venues are actively hosting music
  • Google Business Profile — search “live music [your town]” and check venue listings for booking contact info
  • Music Venue Trust resources — venue network and grassroots room listings
  • Facebook and Instagram — venue pages usually list who manages the music programme in the About section
  • Other musicians — ask who booked them, what the experience was like, and whether introductions are possible

For pre-written outreach messages you can adapt to your act, see our venue outreach templates.

5. Open Mics as a Launch Pad

Open mics are the most underrated tool in a gigging musician’s toolkit. They are not just practice — they are a direct pipeline to paid work, and they cost nothing to attend.

Why open mics matter

  • Network building. Open mic hosts often book the paid slots at the same venue. Impressing them is a direct path to your first paid gig.
  • Musician connections. Other open mic regulars share gig leads, dep opportunities, and band openings. The referral network you build across 5–10 open mics in 2 months generates bookings for years.
  • Material testing. Try new songs, gauge audience reactions, and refine your stage presence at zero risk. If a song dies at an open mic, nobody remembers. If it dies at a paid gig, the booker does.
  • Venue exposure. Playing an open mic at a venue means the staff, regulars, and management see you perform. Several of my earliest paid gigs came from pub managers who watched me at their own open mic and offered a Saturday slot.

Find open mics near you on the GigXchange Open Mic Finder — over 1,300 verified UK open mic nights listed by city and day of week.

6. Setlists That Get You Rebooked

Getting booked is one thing. Getting rebooked is where a live career is built. And the difference between a one-off gig and a regular slot almost always comes down to this: did the audience stay?

A good setlist is not just a list of songs. It is a structure — an arc that opens strong, builds energy, dips for contrast, and finishes with your best material. The artists who get rebooked are the ones who read the room and adjust.

Setlist principles

  • Open with your second-best song. You need the room’s attention immediately. Save your absolute best for the closer.
  • Energy arc, not energy plateau. 3 up-tempo songs in a row exhausts. 3 ballads in a row empties the room. Alternate: up, mid, up, down, up, up, closer.
  • Prepare 2–3 variants. A pub gig on a Thursday needs a different approach to a Saturday headline slot or a Sunday afternoon acoustic session. Have a “background” set, a “party” set, and an “intimate” set ready.
  • Dead air kills momentum. Tune between songs, not during them. Keep chat to 15–20 seconds between numbers. 4 seconds of silence feels like 40 to an audience.
  • Track what works. Note which songs got the strongest reactions at each gig. After 10 gigs, the data is clear — double down on what connects.

For a deeper dive with worked examples, read our guide to building a setlist that gets you rebooked.

7. Getting Paid Properly

The UK live music scene has a problem with payment — too much of it happens informally, too many artists get messed around, and too few musicians treat their gig income as the professional work it is.

The numbers

The Musicians’ Union national gig rates recommend a minimum of £167.16 per musician for a pub or club engagement of up to 3 hours. Typical 2026 market rates:

  • Solo acoustic: £150–£350
  • Duo: £250–£500
  • 3-piece band: £350–£600
  • 4–5 piece band: £500–£900 (pub/club circuit)
  • Wedding 4-piece: £800–£1,800 (Saturday peak)
  • Corporate event: £1,000–£3,000+ depending on profile and duration

For live UK fee benchmarks by genre, city, and band size, check the GigXchange Rate Index. For a comprehensive pricing guide, see our pricing guide for musicians and venues.

Payment hygiene

  1. Agree your fee in writing before the gig. Even a clear email confirmation counts. “Just to confirm: £250 flat fee, 2 × 45-minute sets, Saturday 14 June, load-in at 18:00, start at 20:00.”
  2. Send an invoice for every gig. A free template from FreeAgent or Wave is enough. Invoice within 48 hours. This creates a paper trail and looks professional.
  3. Register as self-employed with HMRC if your annual gig income exceeds £1,000. The trading allowance covers the first £1,000 tax-free, but above that you need to file a Self Assessment return. Set aside roughly 20% for tax and National Insurance.
  4. Keep a spreadsheet. Date, venue, fee, expenses (travel, strings, accommodation). You will need this for your tax return, and it also shows you which venues and gig types are most profitable.
  5. For gigs over £300, use a written agreement. Covering fee, set times, equipment, cancellation terms, and payment timing. Our booking contract generator creates one in under 2 minutes.

For the full picture on tax, invoicing, and payment disputes, read our guide to getting paid as a musician in the UK.

8. Do You Need a Booking Agent?

At some point, every gigging musician asks this question. The honest answer: probably not yet.

Booking agents provide real value — relationships, negotiation skills, strategic calendar management — but the economics do not work at the grassroots level. An agent earning 10–15% on a £200 pub gig is making £20–£30. That is not a viable business for them. Traditional UK entertainment agencies (Alive Network, Encore Musicians) publish commission rates around 20% precisely because that is the floor needed to make the model work — and it is usually applied to wedding and corporate gigs in the £800–£1,800 bracket rather than £150 pub slots.

When an agent is worth it

  • You are consistently clearing £500+ per gig
  • You have 50–100 gigs under your belt with strong reviews
  • Demand for your act outstrips your capacity to manage bookings yourself
  • You want to move from regional to national touring
  • You are targeting wedding and corporate work where agency connections open doors you cannot reach directly

The sweet spot: use platforms and direct outreach to build your reputation for your first 50–100 gigs. Once you have a track record, regular bookings, and strong reviews, that is when an agent becomes a genuine accelerator. For a deeper look at how the agent role is evolving, read our editorial on the booking agent’s role in modern live music.

9. The Future of Peer-to-Peer Booking

The traditional live music chain — artist, agent, promoter, venue — served its purpose. But in an era of instant communication and digital payments, the mandatory middleman model does not make sense for most grassroots and mid-tier bookings.

Peer-to-peer platforms give artists the tools that agents provide — visibility, booking infrastructure, contracts, payments — without the gatekeeping or the 20% commission. With UK Music’s 2024 figures showing 216,000 people employed across the sector, and Music Venue Trust tracking 835 grassroots rooms that collectively host hundreds of thousands of performances a year, the demand for a leaner booking layer is measurable, not theoretical.

That does not mean agents and promoters are going away. It means they are becoming optional rather than mandatory. An artist might find their first 50 gigs through a platform, build a reputation, and then attract an agent who takes them further. The platform is the launchpad, not the replacement.

The GigXchange free tools — the Rate Index, the Open Mic Finder, the Contract Generator, and the Gig Directory — exist to lower the barrier for independent artists. The industry is shifting, and the artists who adapt will have the fullest calendars.


The £167 question: what are you worth?

The Musicians’ Union £167.16 minimum exists for a reason — it reflects the real cost of being a working musician (rehearsal, travel, equipment, insurance, self-employment tax). Going below it signals to the market that live music is not worth paying for, which hurts every musician on the circuit.

That said, your first 3–5 gigs may pay less while you build your track record. That is an investment, not a precedent. Once you have reviews, photos, and a venue list on your profile, raise your rate to at least the MU floor and hold it. The venues that pay properly are the ones worth playing — and they are the ones that will rebook you.


Sources & verification
[1] GigXchange Index — live UK gig rate data at gigxchange.app/rates/. [2] Musicians’ Union rate cards — musiciansunion.org.uk. [3] Music Venue Trust — musicvenuetrust.com.

Accuracy. All claims in this article reflect UK law and industry practice as of May 2026. Legal circumstances vary; this guide is not legal advice. Verify current details with a qualified professional where money or contracts are at stake. If any factual claim on this page is outdated, email hello@gigxchange.app and we will update it promptly.


Related reading: how to promote live music at your venue (cross-role bridge — understand what venues need from you), comparing and choosing acts (see booking from the venue side), the pricing guide for musicians and venues, the open mic guide, getting more gigs as an independent artist, building a setlist that gets you rebooked, getting paid as a musician in the UK, the booking agent’s role in modern live music, and the GigXchange glossary.

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