Questions bands usually ask
The practical questions before moving setlists, dates, files, and shared admin into Bandger.
Before you try it
The questions that come up first
These are the points bands usually want clear before they stop relying on chats, notes apps, and spreadsheets.
Bandger is a shared workspace for the parts of band life that get messy: repertoire, setlists, rehearsals and gigs, tech docs, contacts, files, and band money. It is there to keep the practical side of the band clear, not to replace your creative tools.
Yes. The free plan gives you room to set up the band, add songs, build setlists, and plan basic dates with up to 5 members. It is a good way to see whether the shared workflow fits before you pay for more space or advanced tools.
Every new band starts with 14 days of full Pro access. That means you can test the finance tools, tech rider, stage plot, advanced roles, and the larger limits with your real data before choosing a plan.
No. It also fits cover bands, original bands, side projects, church bands, and any group that shares songs, dates, files, or money. The more people and moving parts you have, the more useful it tends to become.
Yes. You can invite guest players, techs, managers, or anyone else who needs access, then give them the role that matches what they actually need to see or edit.
Yes. Bandger works on iPhone, Android, and web, so the band can check setlists, call times, addresses, contacts, and attached files while travelling, backstage, or during load-in.
Yes. You can attach lyrics, charts, demos, stems, technical docs, and other useful files so they stay on the relevant song, setlist, or date instead of getting buried in chat history.
Paid plans can be billed monthly or yearly. Payments and invoices go through Stripe, and you choose the plan from inside the app once you know what your band actually needs.
Yes. You can change plan or cancel whenever you need to. If you cancel a paid plan, access continues until the end of the current billing period.