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How to Become a DJ in 2026

How to Become a DJ in 2026

I’m Jerry Frempong, and I’ve been a professional DJ in the UK for over 25 years. I’ve played clubs, weddings, radio, private events, festivals, and just about every type of crowd you can imagine. If you’re reading this, chances are you’ve caught the DJ bug and you’re wondering how to turn that interest into a real skill, or even a career.

Let me be clear from the start: anyone can become a DJ, but becoming a good DJ takes patience, practice, and passion. The good news is that right now is one of the best times in history to start DJing. The barriers to entry are lower, the technology is more accessible, and opportunities are everywhere if you know how to position yourself.

In this guide, I’ll walk you through exactly how to become a DJ, step by step, using real-world advice based on decades behind the decks.


What Does a DJ Actually Do?

Before you invest money or time, it’s important to understand what DJing truly involves. A DJ is not just someone who presses play on a playlist. A DJ is a music curator, crowd reader, technical operator, and entertainer rolled into one.

A professional DJ:

  • Selects music that fits the mood, energy, and audience
  • Mixes tracks smoothly using beatmatching and transitions
  • Reads the crowd and adjusts in real time
  • Builds a musical journey across a set
  • Represents a brand, whether personal or professional

If that excites you, you’re in the right place.


Choose the Type of DJ You Want to Become

One of the biggest mistakes beginners make is trying to be everything at once. DJing has many lanes, and choosing a direction early helps you progress faster.

Some of the most popular DJ types include:

  • Club DJ
  • Mobile DJ (weddings, parties, corporate events)
  • Radio DJ
  • Festival DJ
  • Bedroom DJ / online DJ
  • Producer-DJ

You don’t have to lock yourself into one forever, but having a focus helps shape your music selection, equipment choices, and branding.


Learn the Core DJ Skills First

DJing is a skill, and like any skill, it starts with fundamentals. Fancy tricks mean nothing without a solid foundation.

The essential DJ skills you must learn include:

  • Beatmatching
  • Phrase mixing
  • Track selection
  • EQ control
  • Smooth transitions
  • Understanding tempo and BPM

I always tell beginners: your ears matter more than your equipment. Learn to listen properly. Learn how tracks breathe, build, and drop.

Practice regularly, even if it’s just 30 minutes a day. Consistency beats talent every time.


Choose the Right DJ Equipment for Beginners

You do not need expensive gear to become a DJ. Start simple and upgrade as your skills grow.

For beginners, I recommend:

  • A DJ controller
  • DJ software (Rekordbox, Serato, or Traktor)
  • A decent laptop
  • Headphones designed for DJing

Avoid buying professional club gear immediately. Learn the basics first. A good DJ can rock a crowd on basic equipment, while a poor DJ will struggle on top-end gear.


Understand DJ Software Inside Out

Modern DJing relies heavily on software, and mastering it will make your life easier.

Key things to learn in DJ software:

  • Track analysis
  • Beat grids
  • Cue points
  • Loops
  • Crates or playlists
  • FX usage

Spend time exploring your software without pressure. The more comfortable you are, the more confident you’ll feel during live sets.


Build Your Music Library Properly

Your music library is your toolkit. A DJ with poor music selection will never succeed, no matter how good their mixing is.

Focus on:

  • High-quality audio files
  • Legal music sources
  • Organised folders and playlists
  • Knowing your tracks inside out

Don’t download everything. Be selective. A smaller, well-curated library beats a bloated one every time.


Practice Like a Professional DJ

If you want professional results, you must practice professionally.

That means:

  • Practising transitions repeatedly
  • Recording your mixes and listening back
  • Practising under time pressure
  • Simulating live environments

When I started, I practised until my hands moved automatically. That muscle memory is priceless when nerves kick in during real gigs.


Learn to Read a Crowd

This is where DJs are separated from playlists.

Crowd reading means:

  • Watching body language
  • Noticing dancefloor reactions
  • Knowing when to change energy
  • Understanding different age groups

A DJ’s job is not to impress themselves. It’s to serve the audience. Always remember that.


Create DJ Mixes and Online Content

To get booked, people need to hear you. That’s where DJ mixes come in.

Create:

  • Short mixes (20–30 minutes)
  • Genre-specific mixes
  • High-quality recordings

Upload your mixes to platforms like Mixcloud or SoundCloud and share them professionally. This becomes your digital CV.


Build Your DJ Brand Early

Even as a beginner, branding matters.

Your DJ brand includes:

  • DJ name
  • Visual identity
  • Musical style
  • Online presence

Be consistent. Don’t change names every six months. Let people recognise and remember you.


Use Social Media the Right Way

Social media is one of the most powerful tools for DJs today.

Focus on:

  • Short DJ clips
  • Practice sessions
  • Gig footage
  • Educational content

Authenticity beats perfection. People book DJs they trust, not just DJs who look flashy.


Get Your First DJ Gigs

Every DJ remembers their first gig. Mine was nerve-wracking and unforgettable.

Ways to get DJ gigs:

  • Play house parties
  • Offer free or low-paid early gigs
  • Network with promoters
  • Approach bars and venues
  • Collaborate with other DJs

Be reliable. Turn up early. Respect equipment. These traits get you rebooked faster than flashy mixing.


Understand DJ Pricing and Value

Never undervalue yourself, but also be realistic.

As a beginner:

  • Focus on experience first
  • Increase prices gradually
  • Deliver more than expected

Your reputation will grow with consistency, professionalism, and quality.


Learn Basic Music Theory (Yes, It Helps)

You don’t need to be a producer, but basic music theory helps massively.

Learn about:

  • Bars and phrases
  • Musical keys
  • Song structure

This improves your transitions and makes your sets feel more musical.


Protect Your Hearing

This is advice I wish I took earlier.

Always:

  • Use ear protection
  • Avoid max volume in headphones
  • Take breaks

Your ears are your livelihood. Look after them.


Stay Inspired and Keep Learning

The DJ industry evolves constantly. New music, new technology, new trends.

Stay sharp by:

  • Listening to other DJs
  • Attending events
  • Learning new techniques
  • Staying open-minded

The moment you think you know everything is the moment you fall behind.


Can You Make a Career as a DJ?

Yes. Absolutely. But it takes work.

A DJ career requires:

  • Skill
  • Business mindset
  • Marketing
  • Reliability
  • Passion

Some DJs go full-time. Others build strong side careers. Both are valid.


Final Advice from a DJ of 25+ Years

If I could give you one piece of advice, it would be this:

Don’t rush. Enjoy the journey.

DJing is about connection, emotion, and shared energy. If you focus on improvement rather than comparison, success follows naturally.

Start where you are. Use what you have. Practice with purpose.

If you do that consistently, you won’t just become a DJ — you’ll become a great one.

— Jerry Frempong, UK DJ

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