DJ software.
Serato, Rekordbox, Traktor, Ableton, Virtual DJ — the honest breakdown of every major DJ software platform in 2026. Plus the tools that make every DJ better, whatever software you use.
The main platforms.
Serato DJ Pro
The most battle-tested DJ software on the market. Used by more touring professionals than any alternative. Deep hardware support, excellent stability, and a workflow that prioritises performance over everything else.
Rekordbox
Pioneer’s own platform. If you play on CDJ-3000s — and most serious venues have them — Rekordbox is the natural home for your library. Prepare tracks, set cues, export to USB. The club standard workflow.
Traktor Pro 4
Native Instruments’ flagship DJ software. Deep effects, stem separation, and a workflow loved by techno and electronic DJs. Less prevalent in mainstream clubs but a serious choice for DJs who want more creative control.
Virtual DJ
The most accessible DJ software available. Wide hardware compatibility, free to use at home, and a huge feature set. Less common in serious club environments but the right choice for mobile and event DJs who need flexibility.
Make music too.
Ableton Live 12
The most powerful tool a DJ-producer can own. Use it to make tracks, build live sets, perform with stems and loops, and DJ with a level of creative control no dedicated DJ software can match. An Ableton Certified Training Centre — Point Blank — can teach you it properly. Full review coming soon.
DJ.Studio
A browser-based tool for planning, arranging and automating DJ mixes. Connects to Spotify, SoundCloud and YouTube, analyses your tracks, and suggests harmonically-compatible transitions. Ideal for DJs who want to prepare mixes methodically rather than freestyling. Full guide coming soon.
Work smarter.
Lalal.ai
Upload any track and separate it into stems — vocals, drums, bass, melody, guitar. Cleaner results than anything else available. Used by DJs to create acapellas, clean edits, and custom remixes. Essential for any DJ who makes edits.
Mixed In Key
Analyses your entire music library and detects the key and energy of every track. Embed the key information in your file tags so Serato, Rekordbox and Traktor can display it. The fastest way to improve your mixes immediately.
Platinum Notes
Also by Mixed In Key. Analyses your music and improves the audio quality — normalises levels, fixes clipping, and optimises tracks for the club. Particularly useful for older or lower-quality files in your library.
Which software for you?
Match your hardware
Your software should match your hardware. Pioneer controllers work best with Rekordbox. Rane mixers are built for Serato. Native Instruments hardware is designed for Traktor. Starting with hardware and choosing software afterwards is the right order — not the other way round.
Think about where you’ll play
Club DJs who want to play on house equipment need Rekordbox or Serato. DJs who carry their own setup have more flexibility. If you’re aiming for serious venues, practising on Rekordbox and Serato from the start will save you huge amounts of readjustment later.
Free options are genuinely good
Rekordbox has a free tier with everything most DJs need. Virtual DJ is free for home use. You don’t need to spend money on software to learn properly — start free, upgrade when you hit the limitations. Serato Lite (free) is a legitimate starting point before Serato Pro.
Don’t switch constantly
Pick one platform and commit to learning it deeply. The temptation to switch software every six months costs you progress. Every platform can produce great DJ sets — the difference between them matters far less than how well you know the one you’re using.
Subscription vs one-off
Serato, Rekordbox, and Traktor are all subscription-based now. Ableton is a one-off purchase (large upfront, no ongoing cost). Mixed In Key and Platinum Notes are one-off. If ongoing costs concern you, factor subscriptions into your decision — they add up over years of DJing.
Add tools as you develop
Start with your main DJ software only. Add Mixed In Key after six months when you’re ready to think about harmonic mixing. Add Lalal.ai when you want to make edits. Add Ableton when you’re ready to produce. Layer tools as you develop — not all at once.
Our reviews.
In-depth reviews, comparisons, and guides for DJ software, production tools, and DJ utilities.
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