13 best house sample packs on Splice

Samplestar JunoGroove - Jackin' Tech House
When you purchase through the links on my site, you support the site at no extra cost to you. Here is how it works.

House music covers a lot of ground. From late-night deep house in tiny basement clubs to peak-time tech house at festivals, from ceremonial organic house at sunset to jackin’ grooves at 4am, it’s a genre that refuses to sit still.

This list pulls together packs across all those subgenres, so whether you’re chasing deep, tech, melodic, organic, bouncy, jackin’, percussive, or afro tech sounds, there’s something here that fits. Some packs go wide and cover multiple styles, others go deep on one specific vibe.

Splice is the platform for all of these, which honestly is hard to beat. Instead of dropping a chunk of money on a pack and hoping the kicks slap and the basslines groove, you can preview every single sample, download just the ones you want using monthly credits, or grab the whole pack if it’s a full hit. Tag-based browsing also makes it easy to dig sideways into related sounds across the catalog.

The labels here read like a who’s-who of house production. Toolroom has three entries because Mark Knight’s label has been shaping the genre for years. Audentity Records, Sample Tools by Cr2, Samplestar, and Sample Magic each have multiple picks, with Bingoshakerz and Zenhiser rounding things out. Producers featured include CASSIMM, Mark Knight, Rene Amesz, Marco Lys, David Herrero, JunoGroove, plus inspiration from heavyweights like Fisher, Mau P, Joris Voorn, Kölsch, Artbat, Tinlicker, Noizu, Westend, and Chris Lake.

Everything here is 100% royalty-free, so anything you make with these can be released without licensing worries. Image credits go to Splice.

1. Toolroom CASSIMM Vol. 2 – Trademark Series

Check this pack

Toolroom CASSIMM Vol. 2 - Trademark Series

CASSIMM had one of those 2023 moments that producers dream about. His reimagining of the 90s hit “Waterfall” by Atlantic Ocean turned him into Beatport’s best-selling House artist, and now this is volume two of his Trademark Series, packed with 471 samples worth of his signature sound.

What I love about this pack is how it covers the whole spectrum. CASSIMM works across Big Room, Classic House, and Tech House, so you’re not locked into one specific subgenre when you drop these into your tracks.

For me the standout is the vocal content. You get 14 male vocal phrases, 9 female vocal phrases, plus a bunch of ad libs that genuinely give your tracks that DJ-friendly hookiness without sounding cheesy.

The drum loop breakdown is also seriously generous. 30 full drum loops, 29 kick loops, 30 clap loops, 30 hat loops, 29 perc loops, and 28 no-kick loops means you can rebuild grooves any way you want.

I appreciate that the 30 bass loops and 30 synth loops also lean into that timeless house sound CASSIMM is known for, plus all the one-shots are there for building from scratch.

Pros: Strong artist pedigree with comprehensive drum stems and proper vocal content. Cons: No included MIDI, so you’re working with audio loops rather than fully editable patterns.

2. Bingoshakerz Modern House

Check this pack

Bingoshakerz Modern House

Sub-heavy basslines, classic M1 piano riffs, and 655 samples of uncompromising deep, future, and bass house energy. Bingoshakerz packed 650MB into this one, and somehow it still feels focused rather than scattered.

What I love about this pack is the throwback element. The classic M1 piano and organ riffs sound like they were lifted straight from a 90s house record, but updated with modern low-end weight that actually works in today’s mixes.

For me the standout is the 80 bass loops. That’s a serious amount of low-end content for a single pack, and they’re all sub-heavy, club-ready, and tagged for tempo and key.

The drum content holds its own too. You get 108 drum loops, 20 stripped drum loops (138 sounds in total), plus 50 kicks, 50 claps, 50 hats, and 50 percussion one-shots for building beats from scratch.

I’d say the bonus here is the 15 VST presets for Spire, which is rare for a Splice pack and means you can actually rebuild the synth sounds from scratch in your own DAW.

Pros: Classic house DNA fused with modern weight, plus rare Spire preset inclusion. Cons: The presets need Spire v1.1 or higher, so they’re useless if you don’t own that synth.

3. Sample Magic Deeper Tech-House 2

Check this pack

Sample Magic Deeper Tech-House 2

Stripped-back tech house is its own art form. This Sample Magic pack delivers 452 samples of driving, dynamic, energetic, and expansive tech house tools, leaning into the moodier corners of the genre rather than the festival-ready peak-time sound.

What I love about this pack is the texture variety. You get drums, synth, vocals, bass, tops, percussion, shouts, kicks, snares, FX, sub, and chords all sitting comfortably together, and the way Sample Magic curated it means everything actually plays nice in a mix.

For me the standout is the more unusual content like female and male phrases, conga, rims, tambourine, claves, and electric piano. These are the textures that elevate tech house from generic to characterful.

The pack also includes risers, leads, plucks, melody, hooks, fills, and chops, which covers basically every transitional moment you’d want in a tech house production.

I appreciate that the vibe ranges from driving to expansive, so you can pull deep, dusty grooves or push into more energetic sections without leaving the pack.

Pros: Strong textural variety with unusual percussion and vocal options that elevate tracks. Cons: No MIDI included, so you’re stuck with the audio loops as recorded.

4. Audentity Records Bouncy Tech House

Check this pack

Audentity Records Bouncy Tech House

The trending tech house sound that’s rocking dance floors right now lives in this pack. Audentity built it as a fusion of Tech House, Melodic House, 90s House, and EDM/Bigroom, and the inspiration list is the genre’s current royalty: Fisher, Mau P, Noizu, Matroda, and Diplo.

What I love about this pack is the songstarter approach. You get 5 songstarter loops that give you full musical ideas to build around, which is honestly the fastest way to get a track moving when you’re stuck.

For me the standout is the 79 synth loops broken into chords, leads, pads, and plucks. That’s a serious melodic toolkit, and combined with the 15 Serum presets and 50 MIDI files, you’ve got real creative flexibility.

The drum content is also dialed in for the festival-ready sound. 58 drum loops and 65 drum one-shots mean you can layer punchy kicks and drums however you want.

You also get 10 vocal chop loops and 10 vocal phrases, which is exactly what the modern tech house sound demands. 307 files in the main pack, 357 total when you include MIDIs.

Pros: Trending sound with strong artist references plus Serum presets and MIDI included. Cons: Smaller drum loop count than some competitors, and the bigroom lean might not suit deeper styles.

5. Zenhiser Particles

Check this pack

Zenhiser Particles

Sometimes you just want a pack that does everything. Particles is one of Zenhiser’s largest releases at 3.4GB and 1133 samples on Splice, packed with that analogue infused powerhouse of Deep House sounds they’ve become known for.

What I love about this pack is the deep house artist references: NTFO, Roy Rosenfeld, Danny Howells, Rossko, Stefano Noferini, and Daniel Dubb. That’s a serious list, and the pack genuinely captures their sound.

For me the standout is the sheer drum hit count. 50 kicks, 34 claps, 95 hi hats, 50 hi hats 2, 13 snares, 110 percussion, 39 toms, 15 shakers, and 12 glasses is genuinely overkill in the best possible way.

The loop content is also seriously deep. You get 263 drum beats, 144 synth and instrument loops, 59 basslines, 50 full mix loops, and 22 textures, which means you can build entire tracks from this single pack.

I have to say the 122-124 BPM range fits perfectly into deep house, tech house, minimal/deep, and house tempos without needing time-stretching.

Pros: Massive content scale with serious drum variety and authentic deep house references. Cons: The size means you’ll spend real time previewing to find what works for a given track.

6. Toolroom Records Samples 05

Check this pack

Toolroom Records Samples 05

Five volumes deep into the series, Toolroom know exactly what producers want from a flagship sample pack. 350MB of professionally produced hooks, beats, licks, and FX, all rendered at 24-bit WAV and grouped by key and scale.

What I love about this pack is the artist roster. You’re getting samples from Rene Amesz, Marco Lys, and label boss Mark Knight, which is essentially a tour through Toolroom’s signature production style.

For me the standout is the diversity. The pack recaptures the label’s range: Deep, Tribal, Electro, Progressive, and Tech House are all covered, so it works as a one-stop toolkit rather than a single-style pack.

The track-friendly emphasis matters here. Toolroom test all their samples at HQ for usability, and the drums, percussion, music, and bass loops all drop into a track without needing surgery.

I appreciate that everything is grouped into key and scale, which sounds basic but makes building harmonically coherent tracks way faster than randomly throwing loops together.

Pros: Genuine label-tested quality with strong artist contributors and key-grouped organization. Cons: Smaller at 350MB, so it works best as a focused supplement rather than a full library.

7. Samplestar Friktion Melodic Tech House

Check this pack

Samplestar Friktion Melodic Tech House

Melodic tech house is having a moment, and this 251-sample pack from Samplestar nails the emotive, lush side of the genre. The reference list reads like a melodic techno festival lineup: Joris Voorn, Kölsch, Artbat, Tinlicker, Miss Monique, and Solee.

What I love about this pack is the focus on lush, emotive chord progressions, arpeggios, and leads. These are the sounds that make melodic tech house tracks actually move people emotionally rather than just rhythmically.

For me the standout is the cross-genre versatility. Samplestar designed this to work for progressive house, melodic techno, and deep house as well, so it’s not a one-trick pony.

The construction kit format also helps you start tracks fast. You’re getting cohesive musical ideas rather than disconnected loops, which speeds up the songwriting process significantly.

I have to say the harmonic blend of these elements is genuinely well-curated. Tracks pulled from this pack tend to hit that bittersweet, anthemic quality the genre is known for.

Pros: Strong artist references with emotive melodic content suited to multiple genres. Cons: Smaller sample count means less raw variety than larger packs.

8. Audentity Records Deep House Ultimate

Check this pack

Audentity Records Deep House Ultimate

The follow-up to Audentity’s number-one selling Deep House series. 159 samples on Splice, but the full pack contains 325 total files when you count MIDIs and bonuses. The first two episodes were massive hits, and this one keeps the run going.

What I love about this pack is the construction kit emphasis. You get 7 melodic deep house construction kits with MIDI, which means complete musical ideas you can pull apart, modify, and rebuild from scratch.

For me the standout is the bonus content. 3 maps with 20 extra synth loops, 20 bass loops, and 20 piano loops, all with 60 MIDIs included. That’s a serious amount of editable material.

The vibe stays warm and atmospheric throughout. Deep house rolling bass loops, melodic piano loops, creative synth loops, dark vocals, and nasty drum hits all live comfortably together.

I’d say the songstarter approach is the real selling point here. Drop one of the kits in your DAW and you’re effectively halfway through an arrangement before you’ve written a single note.

Pros: Strong construction kit format with massive MIDI inclusion for full creative control. Cons: Smaller Splice sample count, so not ideal if you want maximum loop variety.

9. Sample Tools by Cr2 Afro Tech

Check this pack

Sample Tools by Cr2 Afro Tech

Afro Tech has gone from niche to mainstream over the last few years, and this Cr2 production toolkit captures it perfectly. 575 samples spread across nearly 2GB of audio, MIDI, presets, video tutorials, and a tips and tricks booklet.

What I love about this pack is the educational angle. You get 3 Prod-Cast video tutorials showing the techniques used in the pack, plus a booklet with producer tips. That’s rare for a sample pack and genuinely useful for newer producers.

For me the standout is the breadth of melodic content. Killer bass, drum, synth, guitar, vox, and piano loops all sit alongside punchy drum hits, with key-labelled kicks which is genuinely helpful.

The Songstarter Construction kits are also a real strength. They give you complete musical ideas to start tracks from, which speeds up the workflow massively.

I appreciate that the pack works for Deep, Tech, or House productions, not just pure Afro Tech, so the versatility is built in.

Pros: Comprehensive toolkit with rare educational video content and key-labelled kicks. Cons: The almost 2GB size means more time managing and organizing samples.

10. Toolroom Percussive Tech House Vol. 3

Check this pack

Toolroom Percussive Tech House Vol. 3

Percussion is the secret weapon of tech house, and this 476-sample pack from Toolroom is dedicated entirely to that idea. Designed for Tech House, House, Deep House, and Minimal, it’s volume three in one of Toolroom’s most consistent series.

What I love about this pack is the stem-splitting approach. The 30 drum loops are spliced into individual stems, which means you can mute, solo, and rebalance the percussion exactly how you want without being locked into the mix decisions.

For me the standout is how the percussion captures that authentic feel of live percussion. Tech house can sound sterile when the drums are too programmed, and this pack actively avoids that trap.

The 30 high-energy bass loops and 30 uplifting music loops are also strong companions to the drums. You can build full tracks from this single pack rather than just adding percussion to other content.

I’d say the unique rhythmic patterns are what set this volume apart. The grooves swing in ways that generic tech house packs don’t, which gives your tracks more character.

Pros: Excellent stem-split drum loops with live percussion feel and high-energy bass content. Cons: Percussion-focused angle means it works best as a complement to broader packs.

11. Sample Tools by Cr2 Deep House Tools

Check this pack

Sample Tools by Cr2 Deep House Tools

Cr2’s Deep House Tools delivers 495 samples built as a brand new production toolkit covering tech house, house, and deep house. The instrument list reads like a wishlist for any producer.

What I love about this pack is the depth of musical content. You get drums, synth, bass, grooves, tops, kicks, FX, piano, percussion, keys, sidechained loops, claps, snares, acoustic content, vocals, and guitar, which means you basically don’t need a second pack for melodic ideas.

For me the standout is the unusual instrument inclusion. Saxophone, harp, brass and woodwinds, and field recordings are not standard sample pack content, and they add real character to deep house productions where texture matters more than peak energy.

The drum content also covers everything you need: hats, cymbals, reverse, crash, music, downers, strings, noise, leads, impacts, pads, and sub elements.

I appreciate that the plucks, rides, stabs, and fills round out the transitional moments that make tracks feel complete rather than loop-based.

Pros: Exceptional instrument variety including rare additions like saxophone and harp. Cons: No MIDI inclusion mentioned, so you’re working with audio rather than rebuilding harmonic ideas.

12. Samplestar JunoGroove – Jackin’ Tech House

Check this pack

Samplestar JunoGroove - Jackin' Tech House

Jackin’ tech house has its own specific feel: chunkier, funkier, more swung than standard tech house. This 139-sample pack is JunoGroove’s first sample pack release, and they bring serious credibility from releases on classic house labels like King Street Sounds.

What I love about this pack is the genuine jackin’ feel. JunoGroove harnesses the classic sound of jackin’ tech house alongside the current landscape of today’s tech house scene, which gives the pack both vintage and modern qualities.

For me the standout is the chunky drum loops and massive percussion workouts. These are the elements that make jackin’ grooves actually jack, and the pack delivers them with real swing.

The beefy groove-soaked basslines also stand out. They’ve got that filtered, funked-up character that defines the genre, and they sit beautifully under the chunkier drums.

You also get freaky synths, powerful kicks, crisp snares, percussion hits, and slick hats to round out the toolkit.

Pros: Authentic jackin’ character with strong percussion and bass content from a credible producer. Cons: Smaller sample count limits variety, and the niche genre focus narrows use cases.

13. Sample Magic Stereo Productions Present: David Herrero’s Organic House Beats

Check this pack

Sample Magic Stereo Productions Present: David Herrero's Organic House Beats

Closing out with something genuinely unique. This 385-sample pack is Stereo Productions’ second collaboration with Sample Magic, produced by Spanish star David Herrero who specializes in Latin and tribal house. 460+MB of chunky tribal rhythms and funky filtered music loops.

What I love about this pack is the structured approach. You get 222 production elements split across 7 folders: 33 vocals, 36 top loops, 20 percussion elements, 27 music elements, 19 loops, 59 FXs, and 28 bass elements.

For me the standout is the unique tribal-funky-tech fusion. Herrero seamlessly merges tribal, funky, and tech-house elements, giving the pack a Latin character that’s rare in mainstream house sample packs.

The instrumentation also goes interesting places: piano, keys, chords, brass and woodwinds, strings, trumpet, wooden percussion, flute, growl elements, plucks, guitar, claps, sweeps, and solo content.

I appreciate that everything sits at 124 BPM, which is the sweet spot for both tribal house and tech house tracks, so the pack drops in without tempo-stretching.

Pros: Unique Latin/tribal flavor with rare instrumentation that stands out from generic house packs. Cons: Single BPM and niche stylistic focus mean it works best as a flavor supplement rather than a primary library.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top