The numbers are in, and they’re hard to argue with. According to the BPI’s latest report, the UK’s recorded music market grew 5% in 2025 to reach £1.6 billion – its highest ever value, and the eleventh consecutive year of growth. But buried inside those headline figures is the stat that should have every music fan paying attention: vinyl sales grew by nearly 20%, reaching an 18-year high.
This isn’t a niche hobby anymore. It’s a cultural shift.
Why vinyl, why now?
The streaming era promised convenience, and it delivered. But somewhere along the way, listeners started missing something – the ritual of it, the artwork, the deliberate choice to sit down and actually listen. Vinyl never really died; it just got louder. Traditional record stores accounted for around half of all vinyl sales last year, which tells you something important: people aren’t just buying records as objects. They’re going out to find them.
Artists like Charli XCX, PinkPantheress, Olivia Dean and Dave all contributed to the UK market’s surge – a generation of artists whose fanbases are young, engaged, and increasingly interested in owning music in a physical form.

What this means for independent music
For independent labels and artists, this is genuinely good news. Vinyl is a format where the independent sector punches above its weight. Limited pressings, coloured variants, direct-to-fan sales, these are tools that smaller labels have always used well. As the major labels scramble to capitalise on the format, indie operations that move quickly and stay close to their communities have a real advantage.
Physical music also generates a different kind of loyalty. A fan who owns your record has made a commitment. They’ve spent money, they’ve made space for it on a shelf, and they’ll probably talk about it. That’s the kind of connection no algorithm can manufacture.
The bigger picture
The UK music industry has now grown for eleven straight years. Streaming still dominates the revenue picture, but the story of 2025 is that physical and digital aren’t in opposition, they’re complementary. CDs even had their best year in four years, with £99.6 million in revenue. The format obituaries were premature.
For independent labels in 2026, the question isn’t whether physical music has a future. It’s whether you’re positioned to be part of it.


