How to Write a Professional Artist Bio in 2026 (With 3 Copy-Paste Templates)

Use the templates below as scaffolding: swap bracketed placeholders, tighten sentences to your voice, and align length with where the bio will appear—social blurb, website module, or full press sheet.

Three starter templates

The Rising Star (short)

[Artist] is a [city]-based [genre] DJ and producer blending [two influences]. After breakout support from [radio/show/label], their [year] single “[title]” cemented a club-ready sound built for peak-time floors.

The Established Performer (medium)

[Artist] has spent the last [X] years between [notable venues or regions], sharing stages with [names or festival slots]. Known for [signature sonic trait], they translate studio detail into high-energy sets that keep dance floors moving from warm-up to close.

The Underground Purist (atmospheric)

Operating at the intersection of [sub-genres], [Artist] builds hypnotic, long-form journeys for rooms that reward patience over hype. Their work appears on [labels or collectives], with a focus on texture, groove, and sound design that rewards repeated listens.

Three golden rules

Write in third person

Third person reads like press-ready copy promoters can paste. First person belongs on socials, not in your canonical bio block.

Keep dates and milestones current

Stale years and old “upcoming” releases erode trust. Schedule a quarterly pass to refresh numbers, venues, and standout tracks.

Show, do not tell

Swap vague claims (“unique sound”) for specifics (tempo range, live hardware, notable remixes, residency history). Proof beats adjectives.