SoundCloud Sees Electronic Music Surge in 2026

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Electronic music now makes up more than one third of all uploads on SoundCloud, based on the platform’s Music Intelligence Report 2026.

This marks a clear rise in creator activity since 2020.

During the pandemic, when lockdowns paused tours and closed venues, electronic uploads accounted for about one in four tracks.

Since then, participation has continued to grow.

DJ set uploads have increased by 39 percent year over year, while streams tagged under dubstep have climbed by 35 percent.

These figures tell a longer story than just a post-lockdown rebound. Growth did not stop when restrictions ended.

Instead, it continued to build over time, even as the wider music industry began to stabilize.

Because of this steady rise, electronic music now stands out as one of the most active genres in digital creation.

Creator Growth Beyond Lockdowns

When lockdowns began in 2020, live events stopped and artists shifted their focus to home studios.

With more time indoors and fewer performance options, many emerging creators turned to online platforms to release music and build audiences.

Electronic music adapted quickly to this shift because it relies on software production and DJ culture.

As a result, upload activity increased as creators leaned into digital distribution.

As touring and festivals returned, activity levels did not drop back to earlier patterns.

Data from the 2026 report shows that electronic music has remained the fastest-growing genre on SoundCloud over the past three years.

It now holds a 6 percent larger share of streams compared to 2022. In the United States, its share of total listening has also grown by 7 percent.

Growth appears across several subgenres.

Uploads tagged #hardtekk, #schranz, and #makina rose by 57 percent in 2025, while schranz alone grew by 83 percent.

In addition, more tracks now exceed 180 BPM within hardstyle, hardcore, and hardtekk.

This steady rise points to ongoing interest in faster electronic sounds.

Listening patterns also show how this growth has spread beyond local scenes.

The growth did not happen overnight. It followed several years of steady gains across the UK and Ireland, where these sounds first built momentum.

Over time, that energy began to travel beyond its original scene.

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Digital Growth Meets a $12.9B Industry

In the past year, streams of UK minimal tech house and UK garage in the United States rose by 18 percent and 19 percent.

It is showing how the movement has started to take hold in new markets.

Meanwhile, US dubstep streams rose by 35 percent. These trends suggest that listeners continue to explore both high-energy and heavier styles.

Together, rising uploads and wider listening confirm that digital activity remains strong even as live events fully return.

These platform trends align with broader industry data. The IMS Business Report 2025 values the global electronic music industry at $12.9 billion.

This reflects stable performance across live events, streaming, publishing, and recorded music.

Even though festivals and touring have returned to full scale, digital engagement has not declined.

Both creator output and listener activity remain higher than pre-2020 levels.

Streaming data supports this trend. In the United States, electronic music has been the fastest-growing genre for three straight years, gaining a larger share of total listening.

In the United Kingdom, it remains the most streamed genre overall.

On SoundCloud, users spend 43 percent of their listening time on current music, while the wider industry averages around 24 percent.

This gap shows a stronger focus on new releases and emerging artists within the platform’s community.

Taken together, these patterns show a genre operating at global scale.

The $12.9 billion valuation, rising streaming share, steady creator output, and cross-market growth all support one another.

Electronic music now develops across both digital and live spaces, rather than relying on one over the other.

A New Baseline for Electronic Music in Soundcloud

Listening behavior helps explain the long-term shift.

In the United States, SoundCloud users spend a much larger share of time on new music compared to the wider market.

Over the past three years, electronic music has also expanded its share of streams by 6 percent.

These trends point to steady growth in both production and consumption.

Other signals reinforce this direction. High-BPM tracks continue to increase within hard electronic styles.

US listeners are engaging more with UK-rooted genres, while dubstep streams are rising again.

With a global value of $12.9 billion and consistent gains across major markets, electronic music enters 2026 with stable output, active listeners, and strong commercial scale.

Digital creation now stands alongside live touring as a core part of the genre’s position.

This balance shows that electronic music has not only recovered from the pandemic era, but has also built a stronger and more sustained foundation.

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Rave Colony
A bunch of electronic dance music lovers who wants to share news from Indonesia to the world.