Ready to get started?
Join artists and venues on the UK's peer-to-peer live music marketplace.
For a standard 2–3 hour evening slot: solo acoustic £100–£250, duo £150–£350, 3–4 piece £250–£600, 5+ piece or function band £500–£1,500+, DJ £100–£400. London runs 20–40% higher than regional rates. Weddings and corporate sit well above pub fees.
Price is driven by band size, day of week, location, draw, and whether the act brings their own PA. For live 2026 rates by role and region, see the GX Index.
One of the most common questions from venue owners new to live music is: "What should I actually pay?" And from artists: "Am I charging too much? Too little?"
There’s no industry-standard rate card. Fees vary wildly based on genre, location, day of the week, the artist’s draw, and the venue’s budget. But there are sensible ranges, and understanding them saves both sides from awkward negotiations. For a deeper data-driven view, the 2026 UK gig pay breakdown digs into real rates by city, gig type and band size.
These are rough guides based on grassroots and mid-tier venues. Festival and corporate rates are a different world entirely.
These ranges assume a standard 2–3 hour evening slot. Lunchtime/afternoon sessions, midweek slots, and residencies often come in lower. Support slots might be unpaid or pay a nominal fee. Weddings, corporate and private functions sit on a different curve — see our wedding band London hire guide for what couples actually budget. For DJ-specific rates, see the UK DJ hire cost guide.
A sensible rule of thumb: the bigger the band, the bigger the venue should be. A 5-piece function band in a 60-cap pub is a budget mismatch for both sides. Match the scale.
The headline number depends on several factors:
Some venues — particularly in London — ask artists to sell a minimum number of tickets or pay for the room hire. This is called pay-to-play, and it’s widely considered exploitative in the UK music community.
If your venue can’t afford to pay acts, consider a door split instead (typically 70/30 or 80/20 in the artist’s favour). It’s fairer, it aligns incentives, and it doesn’t burn bridges with the local music scene. For pub-specific guidance, see how to book live music for your pub or bar.
The negotiation doesn’t have to be uncomfortable. Best practice:
On GigXchange, fees are agreed upfront as part of the booking process, held securely via Stripe, and released automatically when the gig is marked complete. No negotiation on the night, no chasing payment afterwards. If an agent is involved, the booking agent's role in modern live music spells out who does what and where the commission goes.
Fair pay keeps the live music ecosystem healthy. Artists who are paid properly come back. Venues that pay properly attract better acts. It’s a virtuous cycle — and it starts with both sides knowing what’s reasonable.
Join artists and venues on the UK's peer-to-peer live music marketplace.