Do You Need to Move to Berlin, London, or Amsterdam to Succeed? (Techno Scene Edition)
For years, aspiring techno DJs have packed up and moved to Berlin hoping the city would launch their career. Here’s the honest answer to whether that’s actually necessary — and what works instead.
In this guide
The Myth of the Right City
For decades, young techno DJs and producers have packed their bags, moved to Berlin, London, or Amsterdam, and hoped the city itself would launch their career. It’s one of the most persistent myths in electronic music — that geography is destiny.
The reality is more nuanced, and more empowering. Yes, these cities offer genuine advantages. But the path to a successful techno career has never been less dependent on your postcode than it is right now. Here’s an honest breakdown.
Why These Cities Became Synonymous With Techno Success
The reputations of Berlin, London, and Amsterdam weren’t invented by marketing — they were built over decades through genuine concentrations of talent, infrastructure, and culture. Understanding what each city actually offers helps you decide whether any of it is worth pursuing in person.
Berlin
The global techno capital
London
Diversity and industry infrastructure
Amsterdam
Festivals, labels, and community
The Real Benefits — and the Downsides Nobody Talks About
The conversation about relocating to a music hub almost always focuses on the upside. Here’s the full picture:
The benefits
- Direct access to a dense network of promoters, labels, and fellow artists
- Constant scene immersion — new sounds, events, and ideas every week
- More local gig opportunities and label showcase appearances
- Collaboration possibilities that are harder to create remotely
- Industry credibility that still comes with a key city association
The real downsides
- Oversaturation — you’re competing with thousands of equally talented artists
- High cost of living — Berlin is no longer the affordable city it once was
- Burnout risk from constant event pressure and lifestyle demands
- Isolation if you arrive without a network or a clear plan
- The city itself opens no doors — you still need the same strategy you’d need anywhere
The honest reality
Many artists move to Berlin or London expecting the environment to do the work. The city provides access and inspiration — but it doesn’t replace the need for quality music, a clear identity, and consistent effort. You need those things wherever you are.
Do You Really Need to Move? Alternative Paths to Success
Here’s the truth: you don’t need to relocate to succeed in techno. What you need is visibility and connection — and in 2026, both are achievable from anywhere. The question isn’t where you are, but how effectively you’re using the tools available to you.
Build online presence
Strong releases, consistent socials, and regular livestreams reach global audiences without a plane ticket
Tour strategically
Fly in for key gigs and conferences rather than committing to a full relocation — targeted visits, maximum return
Develop your local scene
Become the name in your region first — throw events, build community, and use that credibility as a launch platform
Release on respected labels
Quality music on the right label travels further than you can — a strong release reaches more ears than a Berlin postcode
Collaborate remotely
SoundCloud, Splice, and Discord communities make creative collaboration with global artists genuinely viable from home
“In techno, location helps — but music speaks louder. Success is about strategy, not geography.”
Artists Who Broke Through Without Relocating
The most compelling evidence against the relocation myth comes from the artists themselves. These careers were built on music quality, identity, and strategy — not a Berlin address.
Charlotte de Witte
Identity over address
Built her career from Ghent, Belgium — a city with no particular techno reputation — before conquering global stages through an uncompromising sound and consistent releases.
Amelie Lens
Music travels without you
Proved from Antwerp that a strong artistic identity and strategically released music can reach worldwide audiences without needing to be based in one of the major hubs.
Kobosil
Releases do the work
Demonstrates how releases on respected labels create momentum that travels independently — the music builds the career, not the postcode.
The shared pattern
The track matters more than the address. Every one of these artists built something real — a sound, a brand, a body of work — before geography became relevant to their career at all.
Building a Global Techno Career From Anywhere
Whether you’re in Malta, Manchester, or a small town with one club, these tactics give you genuine global reach without relocation:
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Collaborate online SoundCloud, Splice, and Discord producer communities make creative collaboration with artists worldwide as effective as being in the same city.
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Send promos to DJs who play your style A well-targeted promo sent to 20 DJs who actually play your sound is worth more than mass-emailing 200 who don’t.
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Use Bandcamp and Beatport for self-releases Self-releasing quality music builds streaming data, audience traction, and label interest — all of which travel globally regardless of where you’re based.
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Attend major events once a year Strategic visits to ADE, Sonar, or Time Warp compress months of networking into a few days — most of the benefit of living there at a fraction of the cost.
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Livestream DJ sets Twitch, YouTube, and Mixlr connect you with global audiences in real time — building a documented performance history and fanbase simultaneously.
The bottom line
Stay consistent, stay connected, and stay committed — whether you’re in Berlin or a small town with one club. The digital tools available today make geography less relevant to career-building than at any point in electronic music’s history.