Music

Bandsintown Hits 100 Million Registered Fans, Expanding Its Global Reach


Bandsintown, the live-music discovery platform that’s quietly become one of the most influential tools in the touring ecosystem, has hit a major milestone: 100 million registered fan users. Spread across 196 countries, the platform now connects fans, artists and venues through more than 2.3 million live events — fueling what CEO Fabrice Sergent calls “the antidote to digital overwhelm.”

“People want to be taken out of their homes and their phones,” Sergent told Billboard. “Music is that antidote. It brings people together.”

Since launching its app in 2012, Bandsintown has “grown entirely organically,” Sergent said. “We’ve never spent on marketing. Our growth has come through the support of artists and fans since day one.”

That community now includes 700,000 artists and 65,000 venues and promoters, who upload their concert listings directly to the platform. From that data, Bandsintown generates 450 million personalized event recommendations each month, driving nearly 20 million clicks to ticketing partners.

Sergent says that 60 percent of ticket clicks go to emerging artists with fewer than 250,000 followers. “Our AI is designed to surface rising artists,” Sergent explained. “We’ve built it to expand the pie, not just serve the superstars.”

Bandsintown’s recommendation engine has analyzed billions of data points from user behavior and listening habits. The result, Sergent says, is a system that “learns who the right fan is for the right show” with conversion rates roughly three times higher than users arriving from a social platform or search engine, Sergent says.

“We have this massive dataset of 100 million people’s music tastes,” he said. “That allows us to recommend shows with incredible accuracy. When a Bandsintown user clicks a ‘Buy Tickets’ link, they’re three times more likely to complete the purchase.”

The company’s growth coincides with an increasingly diverse live landscape. In addition to traditional concerts, Bandsintown has seen a surge in comedy, podcast tours, and even book signings. “Comedy is exploding,” Sergent noted. “Fans want moments of levity and fun — reflections of the society we live in. Venues are diversifying, becoming true community centers.”

To meet that demand, Bandsintown recently launched tools for venues, festivals, and promoters under the Bandsintown Promoter product suite. The service automates marketing by targeting fans who follow performing artists and syndicates event listings to platforms like Google, YouTube, Apple Music, and Spotify. Festivals can also use the system to promote full lineups — not just headliners — while recommending individual acts to fans based on their listening profiles.

“It’s about leveraging the entire bill,” Sergent said. “We help festivals connect the dots between their smaller acts and the fans most likely to love them.”

While the majority of Bandsintown’s users are still in North America, Sergent sees the 100 million milestone as a launchpad for global growth. “Now that we’ve reached this threshold, artists know that by publishing their tour dates with Bandsintown for Artists, they can expose their activity — from tour announcements to merch and music releases — to a massive base of fans across the most important music markets in the world,” he said.

The company’s distribution partnerships with Spotify, Apple Music, Google, YouTube, Shazam, and YouTube Music already amplify listings across platforms reaching more than 4.1 billion monthly users. Each month, over 900,000 new fans and 5,000 new artists join.

For Sergent, Bandsintown’s success is about more than metrics. “The purpose of this company was always bigger than the product,” he said. “We want to bring people together to experience that tribal energy of live music.”

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