Why bands are upgrading to Requestin

If you're already taking requests, you already know the problem. You put up your Venmo handle, someone shouts a song you don't know, and the $2 they sent doesn't feel worth the interruption. Requestin was built to fix exactly that.

48%

Based on our early access data, Requestin generated 48% more than Venmo — running side by side at the same gigs, same crowd, same nights. When audience members have both options in front of them, they choose the experience built for requests.

The power of suggestion

When audience members open Requestin, they see your actual song list — with prices. They're not staring at a blank Venmo note field guessing what to type. That single change makes all the difference. People request more when they can see what's available, the same way a menu sells more food than "just tell us what you want."

A checkout designed to convert

Requestin's checkout is built around one goal: getting the request completed. Your song, your price, quick payment. No Venmo usernames to find, no guessing at amounts, no underpaying. Musicians using Requestin earn more per gig.

Stop losing the tourists

Not everyone has Venmo. Every night you're playing to a room that includes people who can't send Venmo — and right now, those requests never happen. Requestin catches every one of them.

You're always in control

By default, audience members can only request from your song list — so every request that comes in is something you can actually play. If you want to allow custom requests, you can turn that on too. Either way, Requestin flags them separately so you decide on the spot, instead of getting caught off guard mid-set.

It's free for bands

No subscription, no monthly fee, no catch. All payment fees are added to the customer's total — so the price you set for a request is the price you receive.