Bandry

One app, not ten

The all-in-one app for independent musicians.

You shouldn't need ten apps to run your music. Bandmates, gear, studios, feedback, playlists, and your press kit, all in one place, local-first. Stop bouncing between a group for this and a marketplace for that and a maps app for the other thing.

The problem

Your music life is scattered across a dozen apps.

A group for bandmates. A marketplace for gear. A maps app for studios. A separate service for your press kit. Each with its own login, its own feed, and often its own monthly fee. The scene that should feel connected ends up split across tabs.

Instagram DMsFacebook groupsCraigslistBandMixReverbGoogle MapsDiscordBandzoogleSonicbidsReverbNationGroup chats

One app, the whole chain

Everything those apps did, in one place.

Seven tools, one account, one scene. And because it all lives together, the engineer who reviewed your track is the same person whose gear you can buy and whose studio is on the map.

Bulletin

Find bandmates and music pros, local or remote. Need-driven posts, no DMs, no algorithm.

Replaces Facebook groups, Craigslist, BandMix

Market

Buy, sell, and trade used gear with real musicians in your scene, not anonymous strangers.

Replaces Reverb, Craigslist, Marketplace

Resources

Studios, rehearsal rooms, repair shops, stores, venues, and pressing plants, mapped near you.

Replaces Google Maps, word of mouth

Press Kits

A hosted electronic press kit on a clean link, plus a PDF one-sheet. Included free.

Replaces Bandzoogle, Sonicbids, ReverbNation

Showcase

Honest, private, reciprocal feedback on your tracks. No performing for a public thread.

Replaces Rate-my-track threads, comment sections

Mixtapes

Share playlists with your scene, matched to the genres you're into.

Replaces Group-chat playlist links

Linkups

Contact gets shared only when both sides opt in. No inbox to babysit, no spam.

Replaces Instagram DMs, email chains

The mix-and-match math

What it costs to build this yourself.

To get what Bandry does, you'd stitch together five or six separate platforms, each with its own login, its own feed, and its own bill. Here's the going rate for the pieces.

What you need The platform you'd reach for What it costs
Find bandmates & music pros BandMix $14.95 / mo subscription
Hosted press kit + artist page Bandzoogle from $9.95 / mo subscription
Buy & sell gear Reverb 5% + payment fees per sale you keep ~92%
Feedback + getting your music heard SubmitHub / Groover $1 to $3 per submission per track, per curator
Studios, rehearsal & venues nearby Google Maps + asking around your time no music-specific tool
Share playlists with your scene The group chat free, and scattered scrolls away in an hour

The mix-and-match way

~$25/mo, and up

Just the two subscriptions (BandMix + Bandzoogle) already run about $25 a month, across two logins and two bills. Then Reverb takes a cut of every gear sale, and getting your music heard runs a few dollars a submission. Five or six apps to keep track of.

The Bandry way

$9.99/mo, everything

All of it, in one app, on one bill. Or $79.99 a year. No per-sale cut when you move gear, no per-submission fee to get feedback, and your press kit is included. One login, one scene.

Competitor pricing as of June 2026, entry tiers shown. BandMix Premier, Bandzoogle Lite, Reverb selling plus payment fees, SubmitHub and Groover per-submission rates.

Why it's different

The other all-in-ones are built for the internet. Bandry is built for your city.

Most "all-in-one" music platforms are really distribution dashboards or website builders, made to get your music onto the internet. Bandry is the opposite end: the local layer. The drummer across town, the studio with a free Saturday, the engineer who actually gets your genre, the venue looking to book. The connections that only happen when a scene has one place to gather.

That's the part nobody else does, and it's the part that's hardest to copy, because it's not a feature. It's a scene.

One subscription, not five

$9.99 a month for the whole thing.

Or $79.99 a year, with a 14-day free trial of everything. Reading the boards and backing posts with a πŸ”₯ stay free. A dedicated press-kit service alone runs $5 to $20 a month. Bandry rolls the whole chain into one bill.

Start your free trial β†’

Questions

The all-in-one app, answered

What is the best all-in-one app for musicians?

Bandry is built to be exactly that, but local-first. Instead of one more distribution or website tool, it puts the things a working musician actually juggles in one place: finding bandmates and music pros, a used-gear marketplace, a map of nearby studios and venues, private track feedback, playlist sharing, and a hosted press kit. iPhone, iPad, and web, one account across all three.

Why use one app instead of separate tools for each thing?

Because the cost of fragmentation is real: a group for bandmates, a marketplace for gear, a maps app for studios, a separate service for your press kit, each with its own login, its own feed, and often its own monthly fee. Things slip through the cracks between them. When it all lives in one place, your scene actually connects, because the engineer who reviewed your track is the same person whose gear you can buy and whose studio is on the map.

How much does Bandry cost compared to paying for multiple apps?

Bandry is $9.99 a month or $79.99 a year, with a 14-day free trial of everything. Reading the boards and backing posts are always free. Compare that to stacking single-purpose services, where a press kit alone runs $5 to $20 a month on a dedicated platform, before you add a marketplace, a website builder, and the rest.

Is Bandry local or remote?

Both, and that is the point. Roles that need you in the same room, like band members and rehearsal partners, are radius-filtered so you only see people who can actually make it. Roles that travel, like mixing, mastering, and design, are globally visible. Local-first, remote when it makes sense.

What does Bandry replace?

For most independent musicians: the Facebook group and BandMix for finding people, Craigslist and Reverb for gear, Google Maps for studios and venues, a paid EPK service for your press kit, rate-my-track threads for feedback, and the group chat for sharing playlists. One app, one scene, one bill.