Progressive House is one of those genres where the journey matters as much as the drop. It’s built on gradual evolution, emotional builds, and the kind of deep basslines and arpeggiated synths that pull you into a hypnotic state. You’re not chasing peak-time chaos here. You’re chasing that slow burn, the kind of sound you’d hear on Anjunadeep, Lost & Found, Bedrock, Outta Limits, or Colorize.
That’s why a great sample pack matters so much for this style. The right loops can give you the textural pads, evolving arps, rolling basslines, and patient drum grooves that take ages to design from scratch.
I went through the Loopmasters Progressive House catalogue and pulled together a mix of the most interesting options. There’s a strong showing from Zenhiser, with smaller picks from Loopmasters, Bingoshakerz, Munchies Jukebox, Big Fish Audio, and HY2ROGEN to round things out.
Everything here is 100% royalty-free, so anything you make with these can be released without licensing worries.
I dug through a lot of options and picked these based on what stood out to me from the demos and teasers alone. Some lean classic, some lean modern, but all of them seem to capture something genuine about the genre. Image credit goes to Loopmasters.
Image credits goes to Loopmasters.
1. Loopmasters Nightlife – Progressive House

Released December 2025, Nightlife pulls inspiration from Patrice Baumel, Nick Warren, and Hernan Cattaneo, which is exactly the right reference list for the modern progressive sound.
You get 418MB of 24-bit content at 120 BPM, made up of 50 top drum loops, 25 full drum loops, plus a variety of synth and bass loops, one-shots, and accompanying MIDI files. The melodic content was crafted using Moog Subsequent 37, Arturia MatrixBrute, and Sequential Prophet-5 for genuine analog character.
What stood out from the demo for me was the synth design. The Prophet-5 and MatrixBrute warmth gives the leads that emotional, expensive feel that Cattaneo-style progressive really needs.
Pros: real analog gear used in production gives the synths a premium character. Cons: at 418MB, it’s on the lighter side for content compared to bigger Zenhiser packs.
2. Bingoshakerz Progressive House

Bingoshakerz are a House music label with releases from producers who’ve worked with Cr2, Toolroom, Hed Kandi, Nervous, Defected, and Spinnin, so the credentials are solid in the genre.
The pack delivers 650MB+ of content with a focus on nostalgic melodics, signature chord sounds, ethereal atmospheres, lush pads, groovy drum beats, analogue and FM bass loops, and percussive elements. There’s also MIDI files included for the melodic loops.
From the teaser, the chord progressions and pad work stood out as particularly strong. Bingoshakerz really know how to make harmonic content that lifts a track.
Pros: strong melodic content with nostalgic chord progressions and MIDI included. Cons: Loopmasters doesn’t list full file specs publicly, so you can’t preview the exact breakdown before buying.
3. Zenhiser Stratos – Organic Progressive House

Stratos sits in that Organic House and Progressive House crossover, which is one of the most popular sounds right now thanks to labels like Anjunadeep.
You get 3.9GB unzipped containing 814 samples + 192 MIDI files at 120-124 BPM. The breakdown includes 150 drum loops, 127 lead synth loops, 85 bass synth loops, 50 music loops, 21 piano loops, 12 pad synth loops, 14 vocal FX loops, 10 arp synth loops, 6 electric piano loops, plus 40 bass synth one-shots and 286 drum and FX one-shots.
For me the standout from the demo is how the melodies actually develop rather than just loop. That’s hard to fake, and it’s what gives organic-leaning progressive its emotional weight.
Pros: 192 MIDI files give you full creative control over the melodic content. Cons: the organic-leaning sound might feel too restrained if you produce more peak-time progressive.
4. Loopmasters Progressive House And Tech

This is one of the older Loopmasters classics in the genre, and the content is genuinely substantial for the format.
You get over 600 sounds at 126 BPM, with 371 loops and 231 single sounds. The breakdown includes 39 bass loops, 123 drum loops, 66 synth parts, 11 construction kits with 143 separated loops (synth, bass, drums), and 27 FX samples. There are also 45 ready-to-play House Bass patches for Reason NNXT, Halion, Kontakt, EXS, and SFZ samplers.
From the teaser the construction kit format is the main draw. Having full ideas pre-broken into stems makes arrangement a lot quicker.
Pros: construction kits give you a real head start, plus generous sampler patch support. Cons: the pack is older so the production aesthetic may feel dated for some modern productions.
5. Zenhiser Mistify – Organic House & Progressive House

Built using gear like the Roland Jupiter 8 and Sequential Prophet 5, Mistify leans heavily into the warmth that defines proper Organic and Progressive House.
The pack ships with 771 total samples and 152 MIDI files at 115-122 BPM. You get 50 bass synth loops, 150 drum loops, 50 music loops, 254 synth loops, 54 MIDI bass synth loops, 98 MIDI synth loops, 26 bass one-shots, 17 closed hats, 18 open hats, 26 kicks, 50 percussion, 25 snares, 51 FX one-shots, and 54 synth one-shots.
What I really like from the demo is the deep, enticing basslines and the swung percussion. That’s the kind of detail that separates good progressive from generic house.
Pros: 152 MIDI files plus classic analogue gear give serious creative depth. Cons: the BPM range starts at 115 which is on the slower side, so it may not suit faster progressive styles.
6. Munchies Jukebox Progressive House Vol. 1

Munchies Jukebox have a clear focus on quality over volume, and this pack reflects that approach with Serum presets included.
You get 563MB at 124 BPM, with 33 Xfer Serum presets, 32 MIDI files, 31 synth loops, 39 percussion loops, 71 drum one-shots, 15 bass loops (dry & wet), 10 full drum loops, 9 top loops, 3 drum groove loops, 22 FX, and 24 synth one-shots.
For me the 33 Serum presets are the biggest win. Once you have those loaded, you can design your own progressive sounds rather than just relying on the loops.
Pros: Serum 2 presets give you real synthesis power beyond the loops. Cons: with 563MB it’s a smaller pack overall, so don’t expect endless drum variations.
7. Zenhiser Invoke – Progressive House

Inspired by Anjunadeep, Silk Music, Colorize, and Zerothree, Invoke leans hard into the deep and emotional progressive sound.
You get 3.3GB unzipped totalling 399 samples plus 30 MIDI files at 120-124 BPM. The content includes 5 song starters with stems (ambient sounds, arps, basslines, drums, leads, percussion, plucks, MIDI), 75 drum loops, 25 basslines, 76 synth loops, 25 full mix loops, 53 drum hits, 12 bass one-shots, 18 synth one-shots, and 20 FX one-shots.
From the teaser the song starter stems are a real time saver. Having pre-arranged ideas with everything broken down means you can hit the ground running.
Pros: stem-based song starters make arrangement quick and intuitive. Cons: at 399 samples, it’s not the biggest pack on this list considering the 3.3GB size.
8. Big Fish Audio Divinity: Progressive House Kits

This is the construction-kit specialist of the list, with almost 4.5GB of content across 20 kits.
The pack focuses on ambient chill and progressive house with lush pads, saturated drums, captivating drones and tones. The vocals were processed with SSL and Neve equipment, and field recordings plus extensive outboard hardware processing add real analogue warmth. There’s also a free Momentum plugin for slice editing and effects.
What stood out from the demo is the textural depth. The hardware-processed drones and field recordings give it a unique character compared to purely software-made packs.
Pros: 20 full construction kits plus the bonus Momentum plugin add serious value. Cons: the construction kit format can be limiting if you prefer building from scratch with individual loops.
9. Zenhiser Oxygen – Progressive House

With over 1500 sounds and MIDI, Oxygen is one of the largest packs on this list and pulls inspiration from Lost & Found, Bedrock Records, Anjunabeats, and Outta Limits.UV.
The pack covers Progressive House and Melodic House, with detailed and percussive content, melodic synth workouts, captivating chord progressions, sublime rhythms, and immersive basslines.
For me the standout is the sheer file count. With 1500+ sounds, you genuinely won’t run out of options for a long time.
Pros: massive content count for serious value. Cons: Loopmasters doesn’t show the full per-folder breakdown publicly, so you’ll need to listen to the demos for specifics.
10. Loopmasters Stan Kolev – Awakening – Progressive House

Stan Kolev is one of the most respected names in progressive house and melodic techno under his Outta Limits Recordings label, so this is genuine artist-pack territory.
The content delivers rich harmonies, hypnotic grooves, expressive melodic textures, and driving low-end energy, including evolving pads, soaring leads, punchy drums, deep basslines, and atmospheric FX, all reflecting the warmth, movement, and analog character of Kolev’s productions.
What I like about this from the demo is the emotional depth in every sound. Kolev’s signature is patience and texture, and that comes through clearly here.
Pros: legitimate artist pack from one of the genre’s defining producers. Cons: Loopmasters hasn’t published the full file count breakdown publicly, so you can’t gauge depth before buying.
11. Zenhiser Voyage – Progressive House

Voyage focuses on Melodic Progressive House with inspiration from Eelke Kleijn, Cid Inc., D-Nox & Beckers, Space Motion, and Rauschhaus.
The pack contains tight basslines, rattling beats, analogue synth loops, divine stems, precise drum sounds, fundamental one-shots, and MIDI for arrangement flexibility.
From the teaser the melodic synth content is the strongest element. The kind of arpeggios and leads that work in long, evolving builds is exactly what this genre needs.
Pros: strong melodic content with solid MIDI support for the price. Cons: the full content breakdown isn’t publicly listed, so check the demo to confirm depth.
12. HY2ROGEN Intensive Progressive House

HY2ROGEN’s Intensive Progressive House blends Groove House, melodic and deep Progressive with Electro and Tech influences, making it a versatile all-rounder.
You’ll find warm, deep and powerful leads & melodies, Groove House infused basslines, heavy techy sub loops, multi-purpose additive synths, phat drum shots, essential effects, crispy top loops, percussion loops, bonus synth presets, and vocal loops.
What stood out from the teaser is the versatility. You can lean it deep, mainroom, or techy depending on what you pull from it.
Pros: crosses multiple progressive sub-styles plus includes synth presets and vocals. Cons: the older release date means the production aesthetic isn’t as current as newer packs on this list.
13. Zenhiser Blend – Progressive House

Blend sits in the Deep House and Progressive House crossover, focusing on emotive and transfixing content.
You get 6.0GB unzipped with 765 total samples plus 178 MIDI files at 115-122 BPM. Includes 5 song starter stem songs, 25 kicks, 25 snares & claps, 32 hi-hats, 25 percussion, 5 crashes, 50 basslines, 172 drum beat loops, 25 full mix loops, 151 MIDI loops, 250 synth loops, 25 bass hits, 49 FX, and 25 synth hits.
For me the highlight from the demo is the emotional, drop-led structure of the content. Gorgeous drops, angelic synths, and radiant basslines all work together to give a finished feel.
Pros: 250 synth loops and 178 MIDI files is a serious melodic library. Cons: at 6GB unzipped, you’ll need decent storage to handle the full pack.
14. Loopmasters Progressive House & Mainroom

Created by David Lubner for Loopmasters, this pack covers a wide range of House styles tailored for the Main Room including Big Room anthems, Funky Deep Grooves, Tech-House pleasers, and Progressive House bombs, with influences from Anjunabeats, Spinnin’ Records, LE7ELS, and Toolroom.
You get 2.12GB of 24-bit content including 64 bass loops, 160 drum loops, 218 percussion loops, 107 music loops, 126 drum hits, 50 SFX hits, 25 vocoded stabs, 578 REX2 files, and 83 soft sampler patches for Kontakt, Halion, EXS24, SFZ, and NNXT.
From the demo the 218 percussion loops stood out. That’s a lot of rhythmic detail to work with for layering.
Pros: huge percussion library plus generous sampler patch support across all major formats. Cons: the mainroom focus may feel less restrained than purely progressive heads might want.
15. Zenhiser Allure – Progressive House

Allure rounds out the list with 900+ samples that fuse Progressive House with Melodic Techno, drawing inspiration from Nick Warren, Hernan Cattaneo, Guy J, Guy Mantzur, Cid Inc, Frankey & Sandrino.
The pack contains a 400-sound drum hits collection plus full mix stems, beats, basslines, synths, instruments, MIDI, FX, and one-shots. It’s marketed for fans of Lost & Found, Replug, Innervisions, and Watergate Records.
For me the 400 drum hits are the standout feature. That kind of detail in drum design is rare and gives you serious flexibility for custom programming.
Pros: massive drum hit collection with cross-over between progressive and melodic techno. Cons: Loopmasters doesn’t publish the full content list publicly, so check the demo for specifics.

Hello, I’m Viliam, I started this audio plugin focused blog to keep you updated on the latest trends, news and everything plugin related. I’ll put the most emphasis on the topics covering best VST, AU and AAX plugins. If you find some great plugin suggestions for us to include on our site, feel free to let me know, so I can take a look!
