Direct-to-fan platform Bandcamp has revealed that artists and labels have been paid out $154 million via its Bandcamp Friday initiative since the program’s launch in March 2020.
The company launched Bandcamp Fridays at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic when lockdowns impacted the earnings of indie artists from tours and shows. The latest figure represents a $31 million increase from the $123 million Bandcamp reported in May 2024.
This year alone, Bandcamp Fridays saw payouts of $19 million from fans directly to artists and labels, topping the prior year’s total.
Bandcamp typically takes 15% of digital sales and 10% of physical goods. On Bandcamp Fridays, it Bandcamp waives its revenue share to let musicians and labels keep the full purchase price when fans buy music or merch. The company said December’s event generated more than $3.8 million in 24 hours, the highest single-day total of the year.
Bandcamp added that artists receive an average of 82% of sales on regular days through the platform’s artist-first business model, contributing to over $1.5 billion that Bandcamp has paid out to artists and labels to date, the platform said on Thursday (December 18).
As of writing, Bandcamp’s website says the platform has seen fans pay artists $1.64 billion, with 77,031 records sold via Bandcamp yesterday alone.
Dan Melnick, General Manager at Bandcamp, said: “Five years on, Bandcamp Fridays continue to show just how powerful direct fan support can be.”
“2025 was another brilliant year for artists and labels, capped by our strongest Friday of the year, and we’re incredibly excited to bring even more opportunities to the community in 2026, expanding to 8 next year.”
“2025 was another brilliant year for artists and labels, capped by our strongest Friday of the year, and we’re incredibly excited to bring even more opportunities to the community in 2026, expanding to 8 next year.”
Dan Melnick, Bandcamp
The platform plans to run eight Bandcamp Fridays in 2026: February 6, March 6, May 1, August 7, September 4, October 2, November 6 and December 4.
In September, Bandcamp launched a new subscription service that gives users access to monthly record selections, listening parties, recommendations and exclusive artist content. The ‘Bandcamp Clubs’ feature launched with a USD $13-a-month subscription fee and offers a “subscribe-to-own” music discovery experience.
Melnick said at the time: “Instead of algorithms, fans get human-curated picks from some of the best DJs and journalists in their respective areas, exclusive interviews with artists, and community listening parties.”
Founded in 2008, Bandcamp launched as a direct-to-consumer alternative to record labels for artists. It has since expanded its services to include features such as ticketed live-streaming and vinyl pressing.
Artists like Peter Gabriel and Bjork have placed their catalogs on the platform.
In 2022, Fortnite developer Epic Games acquired Bandcamp and sold it to music licensing platform Songtradr in 2023.
Music Business Worldwide

