Electronic playlist (100+ EDM and club hits)
Electronic music is the heartbeat of modern parties, festivals, and club nights. With driving beats, synths, and euphoric drops, an electronic playlist creates high-energy moments that keep crowds moving.
This guide provides a complete electronic playlist, covering house, trance, techno, and festival-ready EDM hits for events across the UK and beyond.
What is an Electronic Playlist?
An electronic playlist is a curated collection of EDM, house, trance, and techno tracks designed to energize events, create atmosphere, and deliver memorable dancefloor moments.
What Makes a Great Electronic Playlist
Key elements of a successful electronic playlist:
- Energy progression – build from warm-up to peak-time tracks
- Beat variety – include house, trance, techno, and festival EDM
- Recognisable hooks and drops – essential for engagement
- Mix of classic and modern tracks – keeps playlist fresh
The goal is to maintain flow while balancing familiarity and innovation.
The Full Electronic Playlist
Chill & Warm-Up Tracks
- Route 94 – My Love
- Duke Dumont – Ocean Drive
- MK – 17
- Meduza – Piece of Your Heart
- Gorgon City – Ready for Your Love
- Robin S – Show Me Love
- Disclosure – Latch
- Calvin Harris – Summer
- Clean Bandit – Rather Be
- Joel Corry – Head & Heart
- Peggy Gou – Nanana
- Purple Disco Machine – Dopamine
- Armand Van Helden – You Don’t Know Me
- Moloko – Sing It Back
- Eric Prydz – Call On Me
- Stardust – Music Sounds Better With You
- Inner City – Good Life
- Daft Punk – One More Time
- Chicane – Saltwater
- Faithless – Insomnia
Peak-Time EDM & Club Anthems
- Swedish House Mafia – Don’t You Worry Child
- Avicii – Levels
- Avicii – Wake Me Up
- Calvin Harris – I’m Not Alone
- David Guetta – Titanium
- Deadmau5 – Strobe
- Tiësto – Adagio for Strings
- Armin van Buuren – Blah Blah Blah
- Martin Garrix – Animals
- Hardwell – Spaceman
- Porter Robinson – Language
- Alesso – Heroes
- Zedd – Clarity
- Skrillex – Bangarang
- Diplo – Revolution
- Steve Aoki – Boneless
- Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike – Mammoth
- Axwell Λ Ingrosso – Sun Is Shining
- Galantis – Runaway (U & I)
- Robin Schulz – Sugar
Festival & Big Room Anthems
- Tiësto – Red Lights
- Calvin Harris – Feel So Close
- Swedish House Mafia – Miami 2 Ibiza
- Deadmau5 – Raise Your Weapon
- Eric Prydz – Opus
- David Guetta – Play Hard
- Martin Solveig – Intoxicated
- Duke Dumont – Need U (100%)
- Fisher – Losing It
- CamelPhat – Cola
- Afrojack – Ten Feet Tall
- Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike vs Ummet Ozcan – The Hum
- Nicky Romero – Toulouse
- W&W – Bigfoot
- KSHMR – Secrets
- Armin van Buuren – In And Out Of Love
- Above & Beyond – Sun & Moon
- Hardwell – Apollo
- Skrillex – Scary Monsters And Nice Sprites
- Steve Angello – KNAS
Playlist Structure Overview
| Section | Purpose | Typical Songs | Energy Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chill & Warm-Up | Build atmosphere | Deep house, vocal house, melodic EDM | Low–Medium |
| Peak-Time | Main dancefloor | EDM, festival anthems, big room | High |
| Festival & Big Room | Singalong & crowd moments | Mainstage anthems, iconic EDM hits | Very High |
How Long Should an Electronic Playlist Be?
A complete electronic playlist should include 100–150 songs, providing 4–6 hours of continuous music for full-party coverage.
Where This Playlist Works Best
This electronic playlist works perfectly for UK and international events, including:
- House parties and club nights in London and Manchester
- Festivals and summer raves
- Silent discos and outdoor events
- Ibiza-style events and DJ sets
When to Use This Playlist
- Club nights and parties
- Festivals and raves
- Silent discos
- Summer events and BBQs
Listen To The Full Playlist
You can listen to the full playlist here:
Curator Insight
Electronic playlists work best with energy layering and timing precision.
- Warm-up tracks introduce the groove without overwhelming new arrivals.
- Peak-time tracks combine big drops, festival hooks, and anthems to drive the dancefloor.
- Mixing modern hits with classics ensures the playlist feels fresh yet iconic.
- Tracks like Levels, Strobe, and Don’t You Worry Child consistently create crowd excitement and singalong moments.
Frequently Asked Questions
What songs should be on an electronic playlist?
House, trance, techno, and EDM hits with strong build-ups, drops, and festival vibes.
How many songs should an electronic playlist include?
Typically 100–150 songs for full-event coverage.
What defines electronic music?
Tracks with synthesized sounds, energetic beats, and rhythmic progression suitable for dancing and high-energy events.
Related Playlists
- Dance playlist
- Ibiza playlist
- Festival playlist
- House music playlist


