20 Best Free New Disco Sample Packs and Nu Disco Freebies

If you are hunting for the best free new disco sample packs, the field is wider than most roundup posts admit. A lot of the usable material sits across full free packs, trimmed taster editions from paid libraries, and old archive packs that still hold up.

A few picks here are very focused and do one job well, especially drums, keys, or guitars.

A few others are broader and work better as starter folders for flips, edits, and disco-house tracks. I also kept some entries that lean house first because older Reddit threads on nu disco still point producers toward house-oriented Loopmasters material and live-drum or funk-adjacent sources. One practical note: some freebie pages now route through account-gated download systems on Noiiz or Loopmasters, so expect a signup step on a few of them.

If I were building a folder from zero, these are the 20 best free new disco sample packs and free tasters I would grab first.

This pack gives you over 250 samples across drums, percussion, synths, bass, and FX.

It leans house first, though the clean one-shots and arrangement-ready loops slide into disco edits, indie dance, and nu disco with very little cleanup. I put it first because it works well as a flip-starter folder, so you can pair it with more guitar- or key-heavy disco packs later in the list. It is the least genre-pure pick here, though it is also one of the fastest downloads to turn into a real draft.

This one is aimed directly at nu disco and pulls a hand-picked slice from Samplephonics’ Nu-Disco Edits library.

The parent library description points to 30 construction kits plus synth, bass, instrument, drum, and percussion content, so the freebie gives you a good read on that format before you buy anything. I rank it high because it is useful for sketching full sections instead of digging only for one-shots. The main catch is access, since the old freebie now routes through Noiiz.

Disco Tech Freebie gives you a hand-picked sample of a larger Disco Tech library, and the full pack description points to house and disco audio built from analogue hardware and synths plus live keys and guitar loops.

That makes it a strong middle ground between classic disco phrasing and club-ready house arrangement material. I would grab this when you want filtered loops, musical tops, and arrangement glue rather than dry single hits alone. It is one of the better disco-house crossover picks in the full-free section.

This pack is narrow in the right way because it centers on disco drum loops, percussion, snaps, and claps drawn from live recordings. The freebie zip listed on Noiiz is 22 MB, so it is a quick download and a quick audit. I would use it for hat motion, ghost-note feel, and clap texture before touching any synth folders, since nu disco falls apart fast without convincing drums. It pairs very well with cleaner bass and keys packs lower in the list.

Disco Keys Freebie gives you keyboard-led material from the larger Disco Keys pack, and the full version description says it covers classic keyboard sources across six groove categories with chords, leads, phrases, one-shots, and synth basses.

That makes it one of the strongest picks here for producers who write from harmony first. I would reach for this when the harmonic layer feels thin and the track needs a chord hook with disco language. Key-focused freebies are harder to find than drum freebies, so this one earns its slot.

Vintage Disco Guitars Freebie is exactly what the name says, a guitar-led slice from a larger folder of 150 guitar loops and samples. I keep guitar packs high in disco roundups because they fix a common beginner problem, which is too much synth material and not enough human rhythm.

This freebie is a strong way to add strums, chanks, or muted rhythm parts without digging through soul packs for an hour. Again, the download now routes through Noiiz, so expect a signup step.

This pack blends deep house and disco rather than pure nu disco, though that overlap is useful because many current disco edits live in that zone. Samplephonics describes the parent pack as a fusion of deep basslines, synths, pads, drum loops, one-shots, real instruments, and classic hardware sounds.

I would use it as a bridge folder when a track needs disco tone but still has to sit next to house records in a set. It is less about vintage detail and more about steady club utility.

MusicRadar’s 426 free nu-disco samples remain one of the cleanest no-cost downloads for this lane. The pack is split into three tempo-labeled kits, each with drum, bass, and guitar loops plus breaks, sweeps, and drops, and all files come as 24-bit WAV. I still rate it highly because the folder layout is simple and the content lands close to the core grammar of nu disco. For a producer with no budget, this is one of the first archival packs I would pull.

This pack swings harder toward italo than straight nu disco, which is useful if your references lean synth-heavy. It gives you a compact archive of retro-flavored parts that can push a track away from generic house and toward older European disco phrasing.

I use it for arps, bright synth lines, and that colder late-disco tone that fits well with modern drum programming. It is older, though the source is still live and the zip is still available through the MusicRadar article.

The lo-fi punk disco pack is great when you want rougher drums, bass, guitars, and synths instead of polished disco-house sheen.

MusicRadar frames it around James Murphy-style material, which tells you right away that the folder leans toward indie dance, punk-funk, and DFA-style edits rather than glossy poolside disco. I would reach for this when a track needs dirt and edge in the upper mids. It is a useful counterweight to the smoother packs in this roundup.

This is the least genre-labeled disco pick in the top half, though it earns a slot because disco and nu disco pull so much from soul and funk phrasing. The archive is royalty-free WAV, and it gives you live-feeling parts that can fix sterile drums, weak bass writing, or stiff chord programming. I would mine this for source material, then cut and re-sequence it inside a disco arrangement rather than drag in full loops untouched.

It is more of a sample-mining folder than a ready-made disco kit, which is why it is useful.

Function Loops offers this as a free limited-time pack, and the page lists 155 files, 231 MB, 24-bit WAV, MIDI, 88 live rhythm guitar loops, four construction kits, 39 loops, and 28 one-shots. That is a lot of usable content for a free grab, especially if guitar rhythm is what your library lacks. I like this one because it gives you more complete sections than many freebies do, so you can hear how bass, percussion, synths, and guitars sit together.

It is one of the most generous direct nu disco downloads I found in this search.

Loopmasters describes this as rolling dancefloor material for old-and-new disco, and the page offers a free taster pack after registration. Related review text also points to basslines, mid-tempo drums, rhythmic guitars, strings, pianos, pads, top loops, vocal loops, FX, and single hits built around 118 BPM.

I would grab this if your disco folder leans too clean, because the funk angle helps loosen the groove. It is a strong pick for producers who want nu disco with a little pop edge.

This pack gives you 200 individual files, recorded at 24-bit/44.1 kHz and mapped across 123 to 125 BPM, with key-labeled loops and a free taster pack on the product page.

That makes it easy to drop into current house sessions while keeping disco color in the harmonic and rhythm layers. I use it for tracks that need to stay DJ-friendly and club-ready without losing disco reference points. It is less flashy than some of the guitar-heavy packs, though it is very usable.

This is a straightforward hybrid folder for producers who move between house, nu disco, and indie dance in the same session. The product copy says the pack suits all three lanes and includes free taster samples, which makes it a safe download if you are not locked into strict disco purism. I would treat it as a catch-all utility pack rather than a personality pack.

That role can look plain on paper, though it is very useful inside an actual project.

Disco House Sessions sits a little closer to classic disco house and gives you a free taster download on the Loopmasters page. The page also tags it as nu disco and lists a BPM span of 110 to 128, which is wide enough for slower edits and straighter peak-time cuts. I like it because that BPM spread opens a bigger lane than most niche disco folders.

Use this one when you want live-feeling disco elements but do not want to get trapped in one tempo pocket.

Bonar Bradberry’s pack also offers a free taster and leans into disco house session material rather than anonymous sample-library design.

That helps because artist-led packs often bring better phrase choices and arrangement feel than generic folders do. I would reach for this one when I want groove with a little personality but do not want to over-edit every bar from scratch. It is a strong supplemental pack once your drums and keys are already covered.

Nu Wave & Disco gives you a free taster and aims at authentic disco sounds with a glossy nu wave edge. I keep it in this list because it shifts the tone away from standard French-touch tropes and toward synth-led retro club writing. That makes it helpful for intros, pads, lead lines, and chord beds that need a little neon without turning into full synthwave. It is a smart pick for crossover tracks that sit between disco, indie dance, and retro pop.

Stephane Deschezeaux’s pack has a free taster, and search results for the full library point to live bass guitars, synth bass, Moogs, pianos, electric pianos, bongos, congas, shakers, claves, 57 sampler patches, and over 140 Rex2 loops. That points to a folder with a lot of playable, musical content instead of only construction-kit fragments.

I would grab the taster even if you do not plan to buy the full version, because the source material looks strong for bass, percussion, and keyboard work. It is one of the better picks here for producers who want funk-first nu disco.

Designer Disco Guitars is a guitar-only folder, and both Loopmasters and Producer Loops say the free taster is available while noting that the demo drums and synths are not included.

That limitation helps because you know exactly what you are downloading. I would use it to layer clean disco rhythm parts over your own drums and bass instead of lifting full song ideas from a construction kit. Guitar-specific folders like this can change the feel of a disco track faster than another synth pack can.