
CORE
TRENDS

2026


CORE TRENDS
2026
Microtrends across house, pop, and hip hop signal a changing landscape dominated by niche growth and continued genre fragmentation driven by shifts in how creators engage with anever-changing creative environment.
Sound Check
How last year’s spotlight genres fared throughout 2025

Pluggnb, our ‘sound of 2024,’ continued to grow at a moderate 34% compared to its breakthrough of 343%. Phonk broke through the mainstream with 265% growth, as well as an influential crossover into K-pop with BLACKPINK member Jennie’s solo hit ‘Like Jennie,’ both built on phonk sounds and showcasing the growing Brazilian influence highlighted in last year's report.
K-pop received a surge of download growth after Netflix’s KPop Demon Hunters dropped, helping reverse a 6-month decline. Jersey club may be past its peak—the genre saw a 21% decline, but still holds at triple its size in 2023.
The Next Wave


778% YoY Growth
6.6 million+ Downloads
Afro House
Afro house is 2025’s Sound of the Year—following through on our 2024 prediction as an ‘early
growth’ genre to watch, the kwaito-influenced subgenre took
over summer setlists around the world with 778% year-on-year
download growth.

3.0 million+ Downloads
625 % YoY Growth
Speed Garage
Speed garage has arrived at the club—flaunting 2-step percussion, chopped vocals, wobbly bass, and a massive dose of FOMO. The genre saw a huge 625% growth boom over the past year with 3.0+ million downloads.

1.6 million+ Downloads
297 % YoY Growth
Bedroom Pop
Authenticity over polish is the name of the game for bedroom pop’s continued climb. The subgenre’s triple-digit growth reflects a broader increase in demand for the root genres of indie, indie rock, and shoegaze.
Dive into 2026's genres to watch
Charting Sounds
Top packs, breakthrough search trends, and genres to watch in 2026.
EDM, 2018
Pop, 2025
Hip Hop, 2025
Leaders of the pack
It’s clear—people want to dance. 2025’s top three most downloaded packs catered to EDM, pop, and
hip hop creators, with more than half of these high-ranking packs
being released within the last year, suggesting that creators continue
to gravitate towards sounds influenced by current trends.

Dance is here to stay
Hip hop holds strong at the top for the third year in a row, with pop bouncing back to 3rd place and house surging up to 2nd. Afro house comes out on top with 778% growth, with other dance-forward genres like speed garage, hardwave, hard dance, and jump up dnb all seeing triple-digit % growth.

Searching for what’s next
User searches are the best indicators of what’s on the horizon for 2026—take last year’s report on Afro house’s 2024 430% search growth, leading it to become 2025’s fastest growing genre. This year, our data points to R&B-influenced offshoot, sexy drill, as the genre to watch in 2026.
See all the sounds that made the charts.
Global Download Trends

U.S. Download Trends
International Download Trends
Los Angeles remains the most significant domestic market for downloads, with New York seeing the most significant year-on-year growth among US cities. Read the full report to see city-specific download trends and discover the biggest genres driving NYC to the dancefloor.
Looking abroad, Seoul comes out on top for the second year in a row, with the WANA (West Asia and North Africa) region boasting continued growth. See current city-level trends driving global influence overseas in the full report.
Get the global view with
the full report
Key Takeaways

Global Influence
Artists and producers will keep stretching genre lines, fueled by unprecedented access to global sounds, scenes, and styles.
Organic Sounds
Listeners will increasingly gravitate toward music with organic textures, using it as a counterweight to lives dominated by screens.
Raves Hit The Mainstream
Dance music is poised for a broader mainstream moment, channeling collective release in a world carrying plenty ofpent-up energy.
Breaking Artists
A new wave of breakout artists will rise alongside a generation eager for music that feels personal, owned, and distinctly theirs.
Micro Is The New Macro
Music culture will continue to splinter into more nuanced micro-scenes, driven by personalized distribution and highly engaged niche audiences.
You haven't even scratched the surface—get the full report below.


