How to Hire a Band for a Pub Night: The Complete UK GuideFrom choosing the right act to agreeing fees, licensing and the tech setup that keeps the night on rails
TL;DR — the pub live-music playbook
Know your room first (genre, capacity, crowd). Typical Friday/Saturday fees: solo £150-£350, 3-4 piece £250-£500. Book 4-6 weeks ahead. You need a PRS for Music licence but generally not a separate entertainment licence under the Live Music Act 2012.
Always use a digital contract covering fee, set times, tech needs and cancellation. Avoid pay-to-play — it damages your reputation in the local scene.
Those three rules of thumb are the working playbook — the panel below pins the going fees you'll be quoted, the MU floor below which no musician should accept, and the size of the UK live sector you're plugging into.
If you run a pub, bar, or small venue in the UK, you already know the power of live music. A good act on a Saturday night can double your bar take, bring in new faces, and turn casual drinkers into regulars. But finding and booking the right musicians? That's where most venue owners struggle.
This guide walks you through everything you need to know about booking live music for your venue — from finding acts to agreeing terms to making sure the night runs smoothly.
UK live music contributes £8bn GVA — and a good pub night pays for itself on bar spend
The UK music industry contributed £8bn GVA in 2024 and supported 220,000 full-time-equivalent jobs, with the live sector alone worth around £2.5bn, according to UK Music’s This Is Music 2025 report. But you don’t need macro stats — you’ve seen it yourself. The nights with live music are the nights your till rings loudest.
Live music creates atmosphere that playlists can’t match. It gives people a reason to come out, a reason to stay longer, and a reason to come back. It’s also incredibly shareable — punters post videos, tag the venue, and tell their mates. A big chunk of that £2.5bn live revenue flows through pubs and bars like yours, and the Music Venue Trust has documented how grassroots rooms remain the entry point for nearly every UK touring artist.
Decide genre, budget and frequency before you start looking
Before you start looking for acts, get clear on the basics:
- Genre and vibe — What suits your crowd? Acoustic singer-songwriters? Jazz trios? Rock covers? The act needs to match the room.
- Budget — What can you afford? Solo acts typically charge £100–£250 for a pub gig. Duos and trios run £200–£500. Full bands can be £400–£1,000+.
- Schedule — How often do you want live music? Weekly? Monthly? Special occasions only?
- Technical setup — Do you have a PA system? Stage area? Power supply? Or does the act need to bring everything?
3 ways to find musicians: platforms, local groups, or word of mouth
Traditionally, venue owners relied on word-of-mouth, local Facebook groups, or booking agents. These still work, but they're limited by your existing network.
A platform like GigXchange lets you browse hundreds of artists filtered by genre, location, budget, and availability. You can hear their music, check their reviews, and see their full profile before reaching out. No cold calls, no guesswork. For fair pricing benchmarks, the GX Rate Index shows live 2026 fees by role and region.
Other options include:
- Open mic nights — Run one monthly and scout talent directly. You'll see how they handle a room, not just a recording.
- Local music Facebook groups — Post what you're looking for. Be specific about genre, date, and budget.
- Other venue owners — Ask who they've booked recently. The live music scene is collaborative at the local level.
Agree fee, set times, equipment and cancellation terms in writing
This is where things go wrong most often. Vague agreements lead to misunderstandings, no-shows, and awkward conversations about money after the gig. The Musicians’ Union national gig rate for 2026 is £167.16 per musician for pub or club engagements up to 3 hours — a sensible floor when negotiating, and publishing your offer against that benchmark saves you 15–20 minutes of haggling per booking.
Every booking should cover:
- Fee — Flat rate, door split, or guarantee + door. Be explicit.
- Set times — How many sets, how long, with breaks?
- Sound check — What time can the act arrive to set up?
- Equipment — Who provides the PA, mics, and monitors?
- Cancellation policy — What happens if either side needs to cancel?
Ideally, put it in writing. A simple digital contract protects both sides. On GigXchange, every booking comes with an auto-generated contract that both parties sign digitally — no paperwork, no ambiguity.
Promotion starts 2 weeks out — booking the act is only half the job
Booking the act is half the job. You also need people in the room. Here's what works:
- Social media — Post the act's name, photo, and a clip of their music at least a week in advance. Tag them so their followers see it too.
- In-venue signage — A simple A3 poster by the bar and at the entrance. Regulars will plan around it.
- Email/text your regulars — If you have a mailing list, use it. Even a WhatsApp group works.
- Ask the act to promote — Good artists will share the gig with their own audience. Make it easy for them by providing the details and a graphic.
Soundcheck time, parking and a hot meal make the difference on the night
On the night:
- Have someone ready to greet the act and show them the setup area
- Offer a drink and a meal if you can — it goes a long way
- Let them do their sound check without rushing
- Pay them on time, ideally before they leave
- Get feedback from both the act and your punters
If the night goes well, rebook them. Building a roster of reliable acts is the best thing you can do for your venue's live music programme. Familiar faces build a following, and returning acts know your room.
5 pub booking mistakes that cost venues repeat business
These five mistakes come up repeatedly when venues book live music for the first time — each one costs you either the act or the audience next time around.
- Booking acts that don't suit the room — A death metal band in a wine bar isn't going to work. Match the vibe.
- Underpaying and expecting quality — You get what you pay for. A £50 act and a £250 act are different experiences.
- No written agreement — Even a text message confirming the details is better than nothing.
- Poor promotion — If nobody knows about the gig, it doesn't matter how good the act is.
- Sound issues — Bad sound kills a good performance. Invest in a decent PA or hire someone who knows how to run one.
Live music isn't complicated. Find acts that suit your room, agree terms in writing, promote the night, and treat musicians with respect. Do that consistently, and your venue becomes a destination — not just a place that sometimes has music.
Ready to find your next act? Browse artists on GigXchange — filtered by genre, location, and budget. Also useful: what to pay a UK live band, how to promote a music night, how to find and vet local bands, and our city-by-city booking guides.
Accuracy
All claims in this article reflect UK industry practice as of May 2026. Fee ranges reference the GX Rate Index (3,696 observations) and the Musicians’ Union 2026 national gig rates. If any factual claim on this page is outdated, email hello@gigxchange.app and we will update it within 24 hours.
Related reading
- What to pay a UK live band
- How to promote a music night
- How to find and vet local bands
- UK live music licence guide
- City-by-city booking guides
Frequently Asked Questions
Annual refresh commitment
This guide was published on 21 March 2026 and is refreshed every March. We re-verify every reference, recommendation, and data point once a year. Next scheduled refresh: March 2027. If any claim is outdated before then, email hello@gigxchange.app and we will update it within 24 hours.






