How to Find a Booking Agent (And Actually Get One to Say Yes)

Photo by Bob Coyne on Unsplash

Here’s something nobody tells you when you’re starting out: almost every working musician has sent a pitch into the void and heard nothing back. It happened to artists you admire. It happened to people who are now headlining festivals. The booking agent search is one of the most humbling parts of a music career, and if you’ve found it confusing or discouraging so far, you’re in very good company.

This isn’t a guide designed to gatekeep. It’s designed to help you understand how the process actually works, so you can approach it with confidence, realistic expectations, and a real shot at a yes.

What a Booking Agent Actually Does

Think of a booking agent as your live music advocate. Their job is to get you on stages, securing performance opportunities, negotiating your fees with promoters and venues, and routing tours in a way that makes geographic and financial sense. They take a commission of typically 10 to 15 percent of your performance fee for doing so, which means the relationship is built on mutual success. They only earn when you earn. That alignment is actually a beautiful thing, because it means a good agent is genuinely rooting for you to grow.

Understanding that commission structure also helps you see things from their side. If your current fee per show is $500, an agent earns $50 to $75 per booking. For someone running an agency with multiple artists and real overhead, that math is tough. Most agents start getting genuinely excited about artists whose shows can command $1,000 or more, and what really lights them up is an artist they believe can reach $3,000 to $10,000 per show within the next year or two. They’re not just looking at where you are today. They’re imagining where you could go. That’s a hopeful thing to keep in mind.

Are You Ready? (And It’s Okay If You’re Not Quite There Yet)

There’s no perfect moment to pursue a booking agent, and nobody is going to hand you a certificate that says you’ve officially arrived. But there are some signs that the timing is working in your favour.

You’re starting to fill 100 to 300 capacity rooms in your home market. You’ve got a draw – real ticket buyers – in at least a couple of other cities beyond your hometown. You have press materials that represent you well: a bio that sounds like you, good photos, and some live footage that shows what you’re actually like on a stage. You have someone, whether that’s a manager or just a reliable bandmate, who can handle business communications professionally. And your streaming numbers are starting to tell a story, somewhere around 5,000 or more monthly Spotify listeners, with some listener concentration in specific cities.

That streaming piece is worth paying attention to, because it’s become a real part of how agents evaluate artists in 2026. When an agent is pitching you to a promoter in a city you’ve never played, being able to say “this artist has over a thousand monthly listeners in your market” is a concrete, convincing data point. It takes some of the risk out of the conversation for everyone involved.

Growth matters just as much as raw numbers too. An artist who went from 1,500 to 5,000 monthly listeners over three months tells a more exciting story than someone sitting flat at 6,000. Momentum is contagious. It makes people want to get on board.

And if you’re not quite there yet, that’s genuinely fine. Keep playing shows. Keep building. The agents will still be there when you are.

Where to Find Them

The good news is that there are more ways to find booking agents today than at any point in music history. The even better news is that a lot of the best research requires nothing more than paying attention to the artists around you.

Start with bands that are one or two rungs above you on the ladder, playing the rooms you want to play, doing the tours you want to do. Look at their websites. Check their contact pages. Look at who is listed under booking inquiries. Agents represent multiple artists, and if you’re in a similar genre or market, that agent already understands your world. This is the most targeted research you can do, and it’s the step most bands skip because it takes actual time and attention.

For directories and platforms, several are genuinely worth your time. Indie on the Move is one of the primary destinations for independent artists navigating the booking landscape across North America, with venues, contacts, and agents organized by region. The Indie Bible is a substantial, continuously updated directory covering venues, booking agents, festivals, and college contacts broken down by region, state, and city. The Music Business Registry has been publishing contact information for managers, A&R reps, and booking agents for decades and remains a serious professional resource. Groover is worth knowing about too – it lets you send music directly to industry professionals, including booking agents, with a guaranteed response, filtered by genre and location, for a small fee per submission. Not glamorous, but it works.

For artists at the mid-level, conferences are genuinely underrated. SXSW, Depature, The Great Escape in Brighton, NXNE, Folk Alliance, and Americana Fest all function as professional marketplaces where agents are actively looking for new talent. Showcasing at these events, or even just attending with the intention of meeting people, puts you in the same room as the industry in a way that no cold email ever will.

The venue relationship is also worth cultivating patiently. Venue bookers and booking agents are in conversation constantly. If you’ve built a genuine, respectful relationship with a booker at a well-regarded room in your city – consistently showing up professionally, drawing well, being easy to work with – that booker will mention your name to agents. That kind of word-of-mouth recommendation carries more weight than almost anything you could put in a pitch email.

What Agents Are Actually Looking For

Beyond the numbers, agents are looking for something harder to quantify but easy to recognize: a reason to believe in you.

They want to see that you take the live show seriously. A tight, compelling set that leaves people talking is worth more than a thousand streams. They want to see that you’re professional and easy to work with, because their reputation is on the line every time they pitch you to a promoter. They want to see that you understand your own audience – who they are, where they are, and why they care about you.

They’re also looking at your trajectory. Are you growing? Are you hungry? Are you putting in the work consistently, or did you have one good month six months ago and coast since then? A save-to-listener ratio on Spotify that shows real fan intensity, not just passive plays, is something savvy agents notice. So is a social media presence that shows genuine engagement rather than a follower count inflated by nothing meaningful.

And they’re looking at your infrastructure. Do you have a manager or at least a responsible point person for business communications? Do you have a proper tech rider? Can you actually execute on a tour routing without falling apart? An agent needs to know that when they put their name behind you, you’re going to show up and deliver.

How to Pitch Them

Keep it short. Genuinely short. Two paragraphs is the target. Agents receive an enormous volume of pitches and the ones that get read are the ones that respect their time immediately.

Your first paragraph covers who you are: your name, your genre, where you’re based, and one sentence that captures what makes you worth paying attention to. Your second paragraph is your evidence: current draw, tour history if you have it, streaming numbers with any notable market-specific data, and a single specific ask. Something like “I’d love a brief call to discuss representation for the Midwest” is more effective than a vague request for general representation everywhere.

Attach your one-sheet. Include links to live footage – not a studio recording, live footage, because that’s what agents actually care about – and your streaming profile. Make it easy for them to find everything without having to ask.

Follow up once, about two weeks later, if you haven’t heard back. A polite, brief follow-up is professional. More than that tips into territory that can hurt you. Keep a list of who you’ve contacted so you don’t accidentally double-send, which happens more than people admit.

A few things worth knowing before you sign anything: you should never pay a flat monthly retainer to a booking agent. The commission-only structure exists for a good reason – it means the agent only earns when they book you work, which keeps everyone’s incentives aligned. Also pay attention to territory clauses in any agreement, which define which regions the agent represents you in, and exclusivity terms, which determine whether you can work with multiple agents in different markets.

One Last Thing

The music industry runs on relationships and it always has. The agent you sign with five years from now might be someone you met at a conference, or someone who saw you open for a band they already represent, or someone a venue booker mentioned you to over coffee. The pitch email matters, but the career you build before you send it matters more.

Keep playing. Keep getting better. Keep showing up with professionalism and generosity and genuine love for what you do. The right agent, at the right time, will notice. They always do.