Walk into any A&R inbox at a serious drum and bass label in 2026 and you will find the same thing โ too many demos, too little time, and a folder quietly labelled "finish listening later." The producers who break through this year are the ones who understand that picking the right label is half the job. Where you send a track matters as much as what is inside it.
What "accepting demos" really means in 2026
Most established DnB labels stopped running open inboxes around 2023. They now use submission windows, dedicated forms, or curated platforms like LabelRadar and Music Hub. A few still take direct emails, but only from artists who have done some homework. Knowing the rules of each label saves you hours of bouncing tracks at people who never opened the link.
Labels worth submitting to in 2026
Hospital Records
Still the reference point for liquid, soulful and half-time DnB. Submissions are handled through their official submission channel โ expect fully mixed and mastered material before sending. Response times vary depending on workload.
RAM Records
Andy C's flagship remains a target for big-room rollers and tech-edged DnB. RAM is selective and prefers material that already sounds main-stage ready. Private SoundCloud and Bandcamp links travel better than email attachments.
Shogun Audio
Friction's label continues to operate in the atmospheric, vocal-driven and deeper end of DnB. Submissions are handled through the official channel listed on the label's site.
Critical Music
One of the most curatorial A&R desks in the scene, with a focus on technical, future-facing minimal and neuro. Mix quality matters here โ tracks that almost work usually get passed over.
Dispatch Recordings
The reference for serious neurofunk and rolling minimal. Submissions go through the channels listed on the official site โ check there for the current process before sending anything.
1985 Music
Alix Perez's home for hybrid 140 / DnB / dub experiments. If your sound refuses to sit in one genre, this is one of the most curatorial inboxes in the scene.
Carnage Music
A young, Ukrainian-rooted label that has been actively scouting through 2026, with a focus on emerging European producers, original sound design and forward-leaning production. Demos are read by humans, and feedback is given where time allows.
How to actually get listened to
Three things matter more than your bio.
The first twenty seconds decide everything. If the intro does not pull a tired A&R out of inbox-coma, the tab is closing. Build your demo so it earns its second minute.
The mix has to land in the same loudness ballpark as the label's recent catalogue. Pull up their last three releases as a reference and A/B-check before sending.
One private link, one short message, one track per submission. ZIP folders with "here are eight ideas" almost always get archived.
Conclusion
The labels worth sending to in 2026 are the ones still shaping the sound โ not just releasing it. Pick three that genuinely fit your style, study their last six releases, and send your strongest single track to each. Treat every submission like a one-shot pitch instead of a mass mailout, and your hit rate climbs fast.
If your sound sits in the modern, forward-leaning corner of DnB, Carnage Music is currently reading demos for the 2026 release schedule. Send your strongest single track through the demo channel โ concise pitch, mastered file, one link.