For decades, the standard path was straightforward: you get an agent, they handle your bookings, you pay commission, everyone moves on. It was simple. Predictable. The way things were done.

Except that’s not how it’s working anymore.

Comedians are quietly ditching agents. They’re going direct to venues. And unlike the old gatekeeping era when you needed connections to get anywhere, they’re actually succeeding. Not because they’re rebels or because they’re doing something wrong. The fundamentals have just shifted.

Why The Agent Model Existed In The First Place

Agents made perfect sense when comedians had basically no other options. You needed someone with a Rolodex. Someone who’d spent years building relationships with promoters. Someone who could pick up the phone and pitch you to people they already knew.

The tradeoff was steep though. Agents wanted 10% to 20% (sometimes more) of every booking. They wanted exclusivity. They wanted you to fit neatly into their roster. If you didn’t, you stayed unsigned.

This created a natural bottleneck. Maybe three major agents controlled most of the good venues. New comedians who couldn’t crack those relationships? They were basically locked out, no matter how good they were.

But the market had plenty of talent the agents weren’t moving. There were solid comedians ready to work, with nothing to show for it because they weren’t connected to anyone powerful.

What Actually Changed

Today you can reach bookers directly. You don’t need permission or representation. You just need decent material, a usable video clip of yourself performing, and the willingness to actually contact people.

The practical requirements are simple: a public profile showing what you do, a way for people to contact you, a reputation for being professional, and reasonable rates. That’s it.

When bookers can browse available talent directly instead of relying on three agents they’ve always used, the whole equation breaks open. Venues have options. Comedians have access. The friction that benefited agents no longer exists.

Technology made this possible. Economics made it necessary.

The Commission Math

If an agent takes 15% of a £400 booking, that’s £60 going to them. Year after year of £200-500 gigs adds up. A comedian working regularly could pocket thousands more annually without the commission.

Agents argue they earn their cut by finding gigs you wouldn’t find yourself. Fair point. But now you can find your own gigs.

The Real Trade-off: Money vs. Time

When you use an agent, they do the work. You show up and perform. That’s the deal.

When you book yourself, you’re handling everything: reaching out to venues, pitching yourself, negotiating rates, confirming logistics, following up, building relationships. It’s not complicated work, but it takes time. If you’re also working a day job and doing a couple gigs a week, you’re now also answering emails and managing a calendar.

So the question becomes practical. Is keeping that 10-20% commission worth the admin work you’re now doing? For a lot of comedians, especially earlier in their career when they’re not making huge amounts from gigs anyway, the answer is yes.

When You Actually Still Need An Agent

This doesn’t apply universally. There are legitimate scenarios where agents matter.

If you’re booking a 20-date tour across multiple regions or doing international work, an agent handling logistics becomes genuinely valuable. Once you’re making £2000+ per week from gigs, the time they save is worth the cut they take. At a certain level where venues are approaching you instead of the other way around, agents can negotiate better rates and bigger opportunities that you might miss.

Some agents specialize in corporate gigs or college touring and have established relationships that matter. But for most working comedians doing mid-level gigs? Agents aren’t necessary anymore.

Actually Building Direct Relationships With Venues

If you’re going to book yourself, this is what actually matters.

Perform at venues regularly. Open mics, runs, features. Promoters watch. They see if you’re reliable, if you engage an audience, if you show up on time. That matters more than any pitch email.

Get your material on video. Film your sets. Clean audio, decent production, nothing fancy. A three-minute clip showing you landing jokes and connecting with a room is worth more than a thousand emails. Promoters want to see what they’re getting before they book you.

Be easy to work with. Show up on time. Reply to emails quickly. Be professional. Venues need reliability as much as they need talent.

Network actually rather than the performative version. Get to know other comedians, promoters, bookers. Go to shows. Be part of the community. Word-of-mouth from other comics carries real weight.

The Complexity of Going Solo

You need to stay organized. A spreadsheet or calendar tracking what’s booked, what’s pending, what’s confirmed. When you’re managing multiple conversations with different venues, you can’t rely on memory.

Know your minimums and your strategy before you start pitching. Some gigs pay better than others. Some are high-profile, some are small. You need to know what you’ll accept and what you won’t.

Have a brief pitch ready. Three sentences: who you are, your experience level, why you fit their event. You’ll use it dozens of times.

Understand what you’re charging and what’s included. Travel. Setup time. Sound check. Get clarity before you agree to anything.

The Middle Shift

Agents aren’t disappearing. But the power dynamic is changing. At the highest level, with major tours and complex deals, agents still matter. At the bottom, where everything is happening anyway, it doesn’t matter much either way.

The real movement is in the middle. That’s where most working comedians live. And that’s where the equation has tipped decidedly away from needing representation.

You don’t need an agent to build a sustainable comedy career anymore. You need to be good at what you do, professional in how you handle things, and strategic about where and how you market yourself.

FAQs

Do I need an agent to book gigs?
No. You can book directly by showing venues your material, building relationships with promoters, and being persistent about reaching out. Plenty of successful comedians skip agents entirely.

How much do comedy agents actually take?
Typically 10-20% of your booking fee. Some take more for specialty work. A few take flat fees instead of percentage-based commission.

Should I use an agent or book myself?
Early career and doing a few gigs a week? Direct booking keeps more money and gives you control. Working regularly with good income? An agent might be worth it to save time. Touring 20+ dates? An agent becomes very valuable.

Where do I find venues to pitch directly?
Search for local venues in your area, network at other shows, ask other comedians where they’ve performed, and check industry listings and comedy community boards.

What should my pitch actually include?
Your name, your level (new, feature, headline), a video clip of you performing, your rates, and a brief sentence about why you’re right for their crowd. Keep it short.

Is this shift happening everywhere?
It’s stronger in cities with developed comedy infrastructure, but the trend is global. Even smaller markets are seeing more direct bookings as digital tools make it easier.