Built for DJs
Create a DJ Website for Bookings, Sets, and Ticket Sales
Showcase your mixes, list upcoming gigs, sell tickets to your nights, and send promoters a press kit, all from one DJ website. No commission on ticket sales. No coding required.


Your DJ website goes live in under 5 minutes
Start from a selection of premium templates, drop in your mixes, list your upcoming sets, and add a press kit promoters can download.





Keep everything you earn when you sell from your website on About My Sound.
Sell tickets to your residency, club night, or one-off party directly from your DJ website. We don't take a cut. Promoters and ticketing platforms can charge 5–15% per ticket. Across a year of gigs, that's the difference between paying rent and not.
100%
of revenue goes to you.
0%
commission goes to the platform.
Everything a working DJ needs in one website
Whether you're playing weekly residencies, festival sets, weddings, or warehouse parties, your website is your booking engine. About My Sound gives you a press kit, gig calendar, embedded mixes, ticket sales, and a mailing list; without making you learn web design between gigs.
Downloadable EPK
Drive engagement with a downloadable copy of your EPK.
Sell tickets with 0% commission
List your shows on your website and sell directly to fans.
Analytics
Monitor your website's performance with detailed analytics on views, audience demographics, and traffic sources. Track growth over 7, 30, or 90 days.
Build your Mailing List
Build a direct line to your fans that no algorithm can take away from you.
How it works
01 — Create a profile
Enter your stage name

02 — Customize your design
Choose a template that fits your branding.

03 — Tell your story
Add your photos, videos, socials, and bio.


Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to be a producer to have a DJ website?
Short Answer
No. Most working DJs aren't full-time producers. A website helps you get booked, showcase mixes, sell tickets to your events, and look professional to promoters and venues.
Long Answer
Plenty of working DJs make a full-time living without releasing a single original track. Selector DJs, wedding DJs, club residents, festival DJs, mobile DJs, all need a professional website for the same reasons: promoters checking you out before a booking, prospective wedding clients comparing options, fans finding your next set. A website turns "trust me, I'm good" into a portfolio promoters can verify in 30 seconds. The producer DJs on the platform use it differently, they lean on the mix player and release pages, but most of our DJ users are gigging DJs first.
How does ticket sales work without a commission fee?
Short Answer
You sell tickets directly through your website using Stripe. Buyers pay the ticket price, the money lands in your bank account, and About My Sound takes nothing. The only fee is Stripe's standard processing rate (~2.9% + 30¢ per transaction), the same fee every other ticketing platform pays before adding their own cut.
Long Answer
Most DJs are used to losing 5–15% of every ticket to Eventbrite, Dice, Resident Advisor, or Ticketmaster. Over a year of weekly gigs, that adds up to thousands of dollars going to a middleman. With About My Sound, you set up ticketed events on your website, fans buy directly, and Stripe processes the payment straight to your bank
Can promoters and bookers find my press kit on the site?
Short Answer
Yes. Every DJ website includes a built-in press kit (EPK) page with your bio, photos, technical specs, past venues, social links, and downloadable rider, all under one URL you can send to any promoter.
Long Answer
Your press kit lives at a clean URL like yourdjname.com/press-kit. You can send one link in any booking email and the promoter has everything they need. The EPK includes your bio (short and long versions), high-res photos for flyers, your technical rider (CDJs, mixers, monitors), past venues and festivals played, social and streaming links, contact email for bookings, and any video.
Do you have templates designed specifically for DJs?
Short Answer
Yes. Our DJ templates are built around the way DJs actually present themselves online. Minimal layouts that put your photo, upcoming gigs, and mixes front and center, with a dark default theme that fits the club aesthetic.
Long Answer
Most website builders give you a template and expect a DJ to make it work. We took the time to design templates specifically for DJs. That means dark themes by default since most DJ branding leans that way, oversized typography for set times and venue names, a hero space built around a single press photo rather than a band shot, gig calendars that feel like club flyers rather than corporate event listings, and press kit pages laid out the way promoters actually want to read them.
How is this different from Linktree, Bandcamp, or just using SoundCloud?
Short Answer
Linktree is a link aggregator, Bandcamp is a music store, SoundCloud is a mix hosting platform. None of them are a website.
Long Answer
Linktree, Bandcamp, and SoundCloud each do one thing well and nothing else. Linktree is fine until a promoter asks for your rider and you have to email it separately. Bandcamp is great for releases but doesn't host your gig listings or press kit.