13 Best Sample Packs for Tech House

Zenhiser Spinshift - Tech House
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Tech House sits in this sweet spot between House and Techno, where the groove is everything and a single rolling bassline or shuffly hi-hat can carry an entire track. It’s a genre that lives or dies by the drums and the swing, which is why a great sample pack can save you hours of programming and instantly steer your session in the right direction.

The thing about tech house is that the details matter more than the size of the sound. You’re not chasing huge drops or massive leads. You’re chasing tight kicks, snappy claps, layered tops, deep rolling subs, and just enough vocal or stab to give the track an identity.

I went through the Loopmasters Tech House catalogue and picked these based on what stood out from the demos and teasers. There’s a mix here from Wave Alchemy, Zenhiser, Singomakers, HY2ROGEN, IQ Samples, UNDRGRND, Producer Loops, and Loopmasters themselves, plus a free pack at the end.

Everything is 100% royalty-free, so anything you make is yours to release without licensing headaches. Image credits goes to Loopmasters.

1. Wave Alchemy Tech House

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Wave Alchemy Tech House

Wave Alchemy have a really solid reputation for clean, well-engineered electronic samples, and this pack draws inspiration from labels like Toolroom, Suara, and Hot Creations, which is the right pedigree for the genre.

You get 710MB (1.7GB including REX and Apple Loops) of 24-bit content recorded at 123 BPM. The breakdown includes 202 drum loops, 228 kick-free top loops, 101 synth loops, 85 bass loops, 30 SFX, 45 tempo-synced SFX, plus multi-sampled synth patches and MIDI files for every melodic loop.

What I like from the demo is the fusion of rough drum grooves with melodic synth lines. The kick-free top loops are a real time-saver for layering.

Pros: the MIDI files for melodic loops give you full creative control. Cons: it’s all locked to 123 BPM, which can feel restrictive if you usually work faster or slower.

2. Singomakers HÄWK Tech House

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Singomakers HÄWK Tech House

This one is from Italian DJ HÄWK, whose tracks have been supported by Tiësto, David Guetta, Diplo, Lost Frequencies, Alok, Alan Walker, Afrojack, Martin Garrix, Hugel, and Felix Jaehn. He’s also played Tomorrowland, Ultra, and Parookaville, so the credentials are real.

The pack delivers 2.27GB of content with BPMs ranging from 124 to 130, broken into 28 atmo loops, 36 bass loops, 60 stab loops, 42 synth loops, 370 drum loops, 63 one-shots, and 53 SFX.

From the teaser, the stab and synth loops have that signature peak-time energy with the analog warmth that defines the modern festival tech house sound.

Pros: huge file count and a tempo range that covers warm-up to peak time. Cons: the festival-leaning style may not be for you if you produce more underground or minimal tech house.

3. Zenhiser Gold Rush – Tech House

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Zenhiser Gold Rush - Tech House

Zenhiser are known for big, no-nonsense packs, and Gold Rush leans hard into tech house swing at the forefront.

You get 4GB of content including intricate stems, pounding basslines, super swung beats, music loops, authentic synth loops, essential MIDI, tight one-shots, and to-the-point FX, with a total of around 347 samples available on Splice for reference.

What stood out from the demo was the swing in the drum loops, which is honestly the hardest thing to nail in tech house. The stems give you proper mix-and-match flexibility.

Pros: 4GB of content gives you a lot to work with for the size. Cons: the file count isn’t as large as you’d expect for 4GB, since the stems take up a lot of space.

4. Producer Loops Tech House

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Producer Loops Tech House

Producer Loops are pitching this as their quintessential Tech House collection, and from the look of it, it’s built to be a one-stop shop.

The pack contains construction kits, techno-house fusion samples, lead vocal loops, dancefloor basslines, and rich tech drum one-shots. Construction kits are the centrepiece, which means you get full ideas broken down into stems for arrangement.

From the teaser, the construction kit format makes it easy to get a track going quickly, and the lead vocals add a finished feel that pure loop packs sometimes miss.

Pros: construction kits are a real time-saver if you struggle with arrangement. Cons: Loopmasters doesn’t list full file counts publicly, so you can’t gauge the depth before purchasing.

5. Zenhiser Slide – Tech House

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Zenhiser Slide - Tech House

Designed by upcoming producer Fab Massimo, this pack pulls inspiration from Chris Lake, Dead Space, Chapter & Verse, and Don’t Blink, which is a pretty current reference list.

You get a deep mix of rolling basslines, epic synths, punchy drums and loops, plenty of one-shots, and enough MIDI to keep you busy for months. The pack is also designed to fit acappellas or vocal stabs with ease, which is genuinely useful.

For me, the acappella-friendly design is the highlight. A lot of packs have great loops but make it hard to drop in vocals, so having that planned in is a smart touch.

Pros: strong vocal compatibility and energetic, current-leaning sound. Cons: Loopmasters doesn’t show the full content breakdown publicly, so you’ll need to gauge depth from the demo alone.

6. HY2ROGEN Minimal Tech Glitch

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HY2ROGEN Minimal Tech Glitch

HY2ROGEN consistently deliver detailed packs and Minimal Tech Glitch is built around the syncopation between kick and shadow kick loops, which is exactly the staple sound in modern minimal tech house.

You get 1.3GB of content totalling 1130 files at 128 BPM, including 1017 WAV files, 63 MIDI files, 20 sampler patches (EXS, Kontakt), and 30 Serum 2 presets. The breakdown includes 30 adder drum loops, 33 bass loops, 120 bonus loops, 30 clap loops, 30 drum fills, 30 SFX, 30 glitch perc loops, 30 hat loops, 30 kick loops, 408 one-shots, 30 perc loops, 30 ride loops, 30 shadow kick loops, 60 synth loops (dry+wet), 30 top loops, and 60 vocal loops (dry+wet).

From the demo the glitch percussion and the kick/shadow kick interplay are exactly what give modern minimal tech house its signature pocket.

Pros: Serum 2 presets and the dry+wet versions give serious flexibility. Cons: if you’re not into glitch percussion or syncopated swing, this might not match your style.

7. IQ Samples Sigma Tech House

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IQ Samples Sigma Tech House

IQ Samples have a strong recent run in tech house, and Sigma is built on the idea that the perfect groove drives everything.

The pack focuses on modern tech house grooves with the kind of rolling basslines, drum loops, MIDI, synth melodies, one-shots, and vocal cuts that IQ Samples have built their reputation on.

What I liked from the teaser was the clean, modern groove sound. IQ Samples consistently deliver tight productions that drop straight into a session without extra processing needed.

Pros: IQ Samples have a really consistent track record for current tech house. Cons: the full spec sheet isn’t available publicly, so you’ll need to listen to the demo to gauge the depth.

8. Singomakers Eighth Notes Tech House

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Singomakers Eighth Notes Tech House

Eighth Notes captures the driving 1/8 note groove sound that’s been dominating peak-time tech house lately, with inspiration from Fallon, Genessi, Juntaro, Max Styler, WELKER, Biscits, REZONE, and G Pol.

You get 1.17GB at 127 BPM with 40 bass loops, 80 melody loops (41 dry, 39 wet), 40 vocal chop loops, 51 vocal loops, 20 drum fills, 31 full drum loops, 20 hi-hat loops, 20 kick loops, 41 perc loops, 44 top drum loops, 40 effects, 116 one-shots, and 20 Serum 2 presets.

For me the standout from the demo is the dry and wet versions of melody and vocal loops. That gives you the option to use them clean or place them in your own mix space.

Pros: Serum 2 presets included plus a generous mix of dry and wet versions. Cons: locked at 127 BPM, so anything outside that tempo means stretching.

9. Loopmasters Tech House Heat

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Loopmasters Tech House Heat

Released April 2026, Tech House Heat draws from labels like Hottrax, Hot Creations, Metamorfosi, and Hellbent, with influences from Jamie Jones, Joseph Capriati, and Manda Moor.

The pack is built at 130 BPM and contains deep synth basslines, punchy layered drums, textures and effects, synthesizers, and female vocals, in both loops and one-shots.

From the demo, the layered drums sound full and current, and having female vocals included gives you something most pure groove packs leave out.

Pros: modern reference list and the female vocals add a finished, club-ready feel. Cons: the 130 BPM tempo is faster than most tech house, so it leans more towards the techno end of the spectrum.

10. Zenhiser Spinshift – Tech House

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Zenhiser Spinshift - Tech House

Released January 2026, Spinshift is drum-led, bass-heavy, and deliberately upfront, which is exactly the brief for proper tech house.

The breakdown includes 25 bass synth loops, 100 drum loops, 25 music loops, 9 arp synth loops, 2 chord, 3 lead, 5 pad, 2 stab, 3 various synth loops, 31 vocals, 25 MIDI bass synth loops, 25 bass synth one-shots, 25 claps, 14 closed hats, 11 open hats, and 25 kicks, with transients shaped to bite.

From the teaser the drum work has that locked-in club feel with proper transient shaping. The 31 vocal samples are also a generous addition for the file count.

Pros: transient-shaped drums sound club-ready out of the box, plus solid vocal selection. Cons: with 100 drum loops being the bulk, the synth content is more limited compared to other Zenhiser packs.

11. UNDRGRND SOUNDS Tech-House Grooves

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UNDRGRND SOUNDS Tech-House Grooves

UNDRGRND have always been strong in this genre and this pack is pitched as THE definitive Tech-House collection for muscular modern tracks.

You get over 1000 individual sounds at 125 BPM, including bass loops (synced sub riffs, FM loops), drum loops, hi-hat loops, percussion loops with congas, bongos, tablas, cowbells and whistles, ride loops, snare loops, synth loops, and TB303 acid loops, all key and tempo labelled.

What I really like from the demo is the percussion variety. Including congas, bongos, tablas and cowbells means you can build authentic Latin or jackin’-leaning grooves without needing extra packs.

Pros: standout percussion variety and the TB303 acid loops are a nice creative bonus. Cons: UNDRGRND don’t always release Serum or sampler presets here, so it’s mostly loop and shot based.

12. Zenhiser Strike – Tech House

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Zenhiser Strike - Tech House

Strike is one of Zenhiser’s most pumping tech house packs, and the content is very generous for the size.

You get 452 samples plus 25 MIDI files at 125-126 BPM, totalling 3.0GB unzipped at 24-bit. The breakdown is 41 song starters with basslines, drums, leads, vocals, FX and drum rolls, 25 kicks, 25 claps, 25 snares, 25 hi-hats, 25 percussion drum hits, 100 basslines, 100 drum beat loops, 26 full mix loops, 26 MIDI bassline loops, 49 synth loops, 25 bass hits, 25 FX, 10 FX impacts, and 25 synth hits.

From the teaser the 41 song starters are the standout feature. Having pre-arranged ideas to remix is genuinely a fast way to finish tracks.

Pros: 41 song starters give you a real head start on arrangement, and the bassline content is huge. Cons: the song-starter approach can make tracks sound similar if you don’t customise enough.

13. Loopmasters Free Tech House

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Loopmasters Free Tech House

Last but worth grabbing because it’s completely free. Loopmasters offers this as part of their Free Samples library, and it’s a no-risk way to test out their production quality.

The pack delivers royalty-free tech house loops and samples that you can drop straight into a track, with the same quality standards as their paid releases.

What I would recommend with this one is to use it to try Loopmasters’ style before buying anything bigger. If their sound design works for you, the paid packs are an easy next step.

Pros: completely free and royalty-free, with no commitment needed. Cons: the file count is limited compared to a full pack, so it works as a taster more than a complete toolkit.

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