Getting Gigs in London — The Reality
London has more live music venues per square mile than anywhere in the UK. That's the good news. The bad news is everyone knows it.
The Opportunity
There are over 1,500 live music venues in London — from intimate 50-cap rooms above pubs to 300-capacity indie venues. Pubs, wine bars, hotels, restaurants, members' clubs, and corporate events all need live music regularly. The demand is genuinely there, and most venues struggle to find reliable acts.
The Competition
London attracts musicians from across the UK and internationally. Standing out requires more than talent — you need a professional online presence, quick responses to enquiries, and a reputation for reliability. The bands that gig consistently aren't always the best players; they're the most professional and easiest to book.
The Money
London venue pay varies wildly. Some pubs offer door splits (risky for unknown acts), others pay flat fees from £150–£500 per night. Corporate and private events pay £600–£2,000+. The key is knowing which venues pay properly and not wasting time on exposure gigs that lead nowhere.
What London Venues Actually Pay
Realistic numbers based on the London live music market in 2026. Your mileage varies by genre, band size, and reputation.
Where to Get Gigs by Area
Each London neighbourhood has its own music identity. Play to the scene that fits your sound.
Camden & Kentish Town
Still London's beating heart for rock, punk, and indie. The Dublin Castle, The Monarch, and Camden Assembly book emerging acts regularly. Competition is fierce but the audience actually comes for the music. If you play original rock or indie, this is your circuit. Start by getting on multi-band bills.
Shoreditch & Dalston
East London favours the eclectic — electro-pop, experimental, hip-hop live bands, funk. Venues like Paper Dress Vintage and The Shacklewell Arms programme diverse line-ups. Good social media presence is almost mandatory here. These venues care about your brand as much as your sound.
Brixton & Peckham
If you play soul, reggae, Afrobeat, jazz, or R&B, South London is where you'll find your audience. The Windmill Brixton is legendary for breaking bands. Peckham's bar scene (Rye Wax, Bussey Building) books DJ/live hybrid acts. These areas value authenticity over polish.
Soho & Fitzrovia
Jazz, blues, and acoustic acts thrive in central London's intimate rooms. Pizza Express Jazz Club, Ain't Nothin' But, and the 100 Club are institutions. The pay per gig may be lower but you're playing to engaged, paying audiences. Hotel lobbies and upscale restaurants in this area book background sets for £150–£350.
Islington & Angel
Singer-songwriter territory. Union Chapel, The Lexington, and The Garage cater to everything from folk to heavy rock. The area supports both original and covers acts. Many pubs along Upper Street run weekly live nights — approach them directly with a one-page promo and links to your music.
South West — Clapham, Putney, Richmond
Covers bands and function acts do well here. The audience wants crowd-pleasers at parties and pubs, not avant-garde experimentation. If you play reliable covers of well-known songs, this circuit pays well and rebooks constantly. Less glamorous but more financially consistent than East London.
7 Things London Venues Want You to Know
Straight from bookers and venue managers. Not the generic "be professional" advice you've read a hundred times.
- 1. Reply fast Bookers contact 3–5 acts for any slot. The first one who responds with a clear "yes, here's my availability" usually gets it. Check your messages daily.
- 2. Send a one-page promo, not a novel Bookers don't read bios. They need: genre, band size, 1 photo, 1 audio link, your fee, and your availability. Put it all on one page or in one email. GigXchange profiles do this automatically.
- 3. Have your own PA (up to 100 capacity) Most London pubs don't have sound systems. If you turn up and say "where's the PA?" you won't get rebooked. Invest in a decent portable rig — it opens up 80% of the venues in London.
- 4. Don't undersell — but be realistic Asking £500 for your first pub gig won't work. Asking for free won't be taken seriously either. £150–£250 for your first few gigs at a new venue is normal. Increase as you prove you can draw or that the venue's takings go up on your nights.
- 5. Show up early, play on time, leave it clean The #1 reason acts don't get rebooked is logistics — turning up late, running over time, leaving the stage a mess. Sound check at the agreed time. Finish when you said you would. This alone puts you ahead of 40% of acts.
- 6. Play to the room, not your setlist A jazz trio in a sports pub on a Saturday won't work. A death metal band in a wine bar won't either. Research the venue before you apply. Look at what other acts they've booked. Match your set to the room and the audience.
- 7. Reviews are currency After every gig, ask the venue to leave a review on GigXchange. Verified reviews from real venues are worth more than any promo pack. Future bookers will check your rating before your Spotify numbers.
Which Platforms Help You Get Gigs?
Not all platforms are created equal. Here's how they compare for working artists.
Platform Comparison — Artist's View
What matters when you're the one looking for gigs.
| Feature | GigXchange | Encore | GigPig | Alive Network | Lemonrock |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost to join | Free | Free (but agency controls pricing) | Free | Audition required | Free |
| Commission taken | 8% | 20%+ (deducted from your fee) | 10-15% | 20-30% | 0% |
| Set your own rates? | Yes — full control | No — agency sets the quote | You propose | Agency sets price | Yes |
| Talk to venues directly? | Yes — before booking | No — all via agency | After acceptance | No | Yes |
| Original music welcome? | All genres | Covers/function focus | Mixed | Covers only | Strong originals |
| Get paid securely? | Stripe escrow | Via agency (delayed) | Via platform | Via agency (delayed) | No — arrange yourself |
| Audio tracks on profile? | Yes — 30s clips + full tracks | Limited samples | Videos only | Promo videos | External links |
| Best for | Independent artists, all budgets | Established function acts | Regular pub circuit | Polished wedding bands | Networking / discovery |
How to Get Gigs on GigXchange
Three steps from creating your profile to getting your first booking.
1. Build your profile
Upload your best tracks (30-second auto-preview), add photos, list your genre, location, and what you charge. Your profile is your shop window — venues browse it before reaching out. Include links to videos and social media for the full picture.
2. Browse and apply
Filter gigs by location, genre, date, and budget. Apply to any gig with one click — your profile goes to the venue automatically. You can also message venues directly to introduce yourself, even if they haven't posted a gig yet.
3. Get booked and paid
When a venue accepts, a contract is auto-generated and digitally signed. The deposit is held securely in Stripe escrow and released to you after the gig. Both sides leave reviews to build your reputation.
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