NaJade — DJ in Bangkok for Events, Clubs, Weddings & Lessons

How Much Should a DJ Charge?

DJ shaking hands with an event client after agreeing a booking

By NaJade · DJ in Bangkok · Published June 30, 2026

The question every DJ dreads being asked — answered honestly, with the factors that actually set your price.

“So, what do you charge?” It’s the question that makes new DJs freeze. Price too high and you lose the gig; too low and you undervalue yourself and the whole craft. The truth is there’s no single number — but there is a clear framework for landing on the right one. Here’s how to think about DJ pricing without either selling yourself short or pricing yourself out.

There’s no universal DJ rate — your price depends on your experience, the event type, whether you provide equipment, the location, and the hours involved. Beginners typically start low to build a portfolio, then raise rates as they gain experience and reviews. Charge a flat fee per event, never play for free long-term, and always use a deposit and a contract.

First: There’s No Single Right Number

Before any figures, understand this: DJ rates vary enormously by country, city, event, and reputation. The dollar amounts you’ll see in most online guides are US/Western markets and won’t map directly onto Bangkok or Thailand, where the going rates are different. So treat everything here as a framework for setting your own price, not a fixed price list. The smartest first move is local research: talk to other DJs in your city at your level, and you’ll quickly learn the realistic range for your market.

The Experience Tiers

Your experience is the single biggest factor. As Blót’s rate guide outlines, a DJ with years of experience and a strong portfolio can charge many times what a newcomer does for the exact same event. The broad tiers:

  • Beginner: just starting, building a portfolio. Price modestly to win bookings and gather reviews — but don’t work for free long-term.
  • Intermediate: a solid track record, testimonials, reliable performances. You can confidently raise your rates.
  • Professional: an established name and draw. Reputation lets you command premium rates, because clients are paying for certainty.

The path is simple: start low, deliver, collect testimonials, raise rates. Every good gig earns you the right to charge more for the next one.

What Actually Sets Your Price

Beyond experience, these factors push your quote up or down:

  • Event type. Weddings and corporate events pay more than house parties or bar nights — because they demand far more work (planning, MC duties, timeline management, backups). A club set is a different job from a wedding.
  • Do you provide equipment? If you bring your own sound system and lighting, you charge significantly more than if you’re just playing on the venue’s setup.
  • Duration — all of it. Price the whole job, not just stage time: prep, travel, setup, the performance, and teardown. A “3-hour gig” is often a 6-hour day.
  • Location. Big cities and premium venues command higher rates than small towns. Significant travel gets added on top.
  • Date and demand. Saturday nights, peak wedding season, and holidays (especially New Year’s Eve) carry a premium.

Flat Fee or Hourly?

For most gigs, charge a flat fee per event rather than hourly — clients prefer the certainty, and it accounts for all the invisible hours (prep, travel, setup). To protect yourself when events run long, add an overtime clause: a set base rate for an agreed number of hours (say 3–4), then an hourly rate (commonly around 1.5×) for anything beyond. Spell this out before the gig so there are no awkward surprises at 2am when they want “one more hour.”

Don’t Play for Free (For Long)

There’s a balance here. As I covered in how to get your first DJ gig, offering an early slot free or cheap to get your foot in the door is a legitimate strategy when you’re starting. But it has an expiry date. Playing for free long-term devalues both you and every other DJ in your scene. Once you’ve got a few gigs and some proof, start charging — even a modest fee signals you’re a professional, not a hobbyist who’ll work for exposure forever.

Protect Yourself: Deposits and Contracts

Once money’s involved, be professional about it:

  • Take a deposit. A 20–30% deposit upfront secures the booking and protects you against last-minute cancellations.
  • Use a simple contract. Date, time, set length, fee, deposit, overtime rate, and what you’re providing. It protects both sides and makes you look professional.
  • Confirm the details in writing. Even a clear message thread beats a vague verbal agreement.

A Note From NaJade

Early on I undercharged badly — I was so grateful to be booked that I’d have played for almost nothing, and sometimes did. What changed my thinking was realising that a price isn’t just a number; it’s a signal. When I charged too little, clients unconsciously valued the service less. When I set a fair, confident rate and backed it with reliability, I attracted better clients and better events. My advice: research your local market, price yourself fairly for your level, and raise it as you grow. And get a deposit — the first time a “confirmed” gig vanishes the week before, you’ll understand why. You’re running a small business, even if it doesn’t feel like one yet. Price like it.

Pricing is one piece of building a career — pair it with getting your first gig and a strong demo mix to win the bookings in the first place. And if you’re a client in Thailand looking to hire a DJ, you can see my services and get a quote at djnajade.com/services.

Frequently Asked Questions About DJ Pricing

How much should a beginner DJ charge?
There’s no universal figure — it depends heavily on your location and the event. As a beginner, price modestly to win bookings and build a portfolio and reviews, but don’t work for free long-term. The best approach is to research your local market by talking to other DJs at your level, then set a fair rate for your area and raise it as you gain experience.
Should a DJ charge a flat fee or by the hour?
For most gigs, a flat fee per event works best — clients prefer the certainty, and it accounts for prep, travel, and setup, not just stage time. Protect yourself with an overtime clause: a base rate for an agreed number of hours, then an hourly rate (commonly around 1.5x) for anything beyond. Always agree this in advance.
Why do wedding DJs charge more?
Because they do significantly more work than a club or party set. A wedding DJ attends planning meetings, builds custom playlists, often acts as MC, manages the timeline, coordinates with other vendors, and brings backup equipment. The actual dance-floor time might be a few hours, but total involvement including prep is often 10–15 hours, which justifies the higher fee.
What factors affect how much a DJ charges?
The main ones are experience and reputation, the event type (weddings and corporate pay more than parties), whether you provide your own equipment and lighting, the total duration including travel and setup, the location, and the date — Saturdays, peak wedding season, and holidays command premiums. Together these determine a fair quote for any given gig.
Should I ever DJ for free?
Only strategically and briefly. Offering an early slot free or cheap to get your foot in the door can be worthwhile when you’re starting out, but it has an expiry date. Playing for free long-term devalues you and other DJs. Once you have a few gigs and some proof of your ability, start charging — even a modest fee signals professionalism.
Should DJs use contracts and deposits?
Yes. Take a deposit of around 20–30% upfront to secure the booking and protect against last-minute cancellations, and use a simple contract covering the date, time, set length, fee, deposit, overtime rate, and what you’re providing. It protects both you and the client, and it makes you look like the professional you’re asking to be paid as.

About the Author

NaJade is a Bangkok-based DJ playing progressive house, melodic EDM, pop, and Thai music across clubs, rooftops, and weddings in Thailand. He teaches beatmatching and mixing to beginners both in person in Bangkok and online over Zoom. When he’s not behind the decks, he’s documenting the journey on YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok.

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