Jersey Club is pure momentum — fast, bouncy, restless, and designed to make people move instantly, whether that's a dance floor, a TikTok loop, or a high-energy rap performance. Born in Newark, NJ in the early 2000s out of Baltimore Club's DNA, pioneered by DJ Tameil, DJ Tim Dolla, DJ Sliink, Cookie & DJ Lilman, and the Brick Bandits crew, and broken globally on TikTok in 2021-2023 through artists like Bandmanrill, Sha EK, Kyle Richh, Cash Cobain (in his Jersey Club-adjacent work), and producers like MCVERTT, this collection brings together free Jersey Club beats from independent producers staying true to the formula: 130–140 BPM tempos, triplet kick patterns, chopped vocal samples as rhythmic hooks, and punchy drums that stay clear even at maximum energy. Stream them in your browser, download what fits your direction, and if you're a producer or rapper making your own Jersey Club, upload your tracks to the platform. Jersey Club's lineage is the foundation. The genre descends directly from Baltimore Club (Bmore Club) — pioneered by DJ Spen, Rod Lee, and the Unruly Records camp in late-90s Baltimore — and shares DNA with Philly Club. Newark producers in the early 2000s took Baltimore's foundational kick patterns and built something faster, bouncier, and more rhythmically restless. By the late 2010s, Jersey Club was the dominant club music of the East Coast underground; by 2022, it had broken globally on short-form video. The "running kick" pattern that defines the genre is now everywhere — pop records, mainstream rap, TikTok dance challenges, K-Pop production, and beyond. The defining element is the triplet kick pattern. Jersey Club's "running" kick — typically a stuttered triplet pattern — creates the unmistakable bounce that separates the genre from house (4-on-the-floor), Trap (boom-bap-derived patterns), or traditional Hip-Hop (anything else). The kick pattern is restless and playful, designed to skip across the beat rather than sit underneath it. Dancers ride that pocket; rappers find cadences that cut through it; producers build whole arrangements around it. That single rhythmic signature is the difference between Jersey Club and any other club genre. Chopped vocals are the second pillar. Jersey Club producers chop short vocal phrases — sometimes just a word or single syllable — and loop them as rhythmic hooks. The vocal sample becomes part of the drum kit. This technique is why Jersey Club dominates viral short-form video: the chopped vocal is instantly memorable, easy to loop, and creates the kind of meme-friendly hook that travels across TikTok, Reels, and Shorts. Sample selection is the producer's craft — pulling from R&B, Pop, throwback rap, and viral audio creates the genre's recognizable patchwork sound. Drums are tight and purposeful. Crisp snares and claps, sharp hi-hats, and additional percussive hits add movement without cluttering the mix. Because the tempo is fast and the kick patterns are dense, mix discipline matters more here than in slower genres — transients have to stay defined so the rhythm doesn't blur into noise. The low end is punchy but controlled, big enough to feel in a club but tight enough that it doesn't smear the rapid kick movement. What BPM is Jersey Club? Most Jersey Club sits at 130–140 BPM, with the sweet spot around 135–140 BPM. Some harder Jersey Drill hybrid records can push 140–150 BPM. Bmore Club traditionally sits slightly slower at 125–135 BPM. Philly Club generally aligns with Jersey at 130–140 BPM. Every track in this collection has BPM and key data attached so you can match tempo to your project. Jersey Club Rap is the modern evolution where space is intentionally left for vocals. These beats hold the triplet bounce but pull back the chopped vocal density so rappers can deliver high-energy verses, hook chants, and ad-libs without fighting the beat. The Bandmanrill/Sha EK era proved Jersey Club could be a rap subgenre as well as a dance-floor genre, and producers like MCVERTT built the production language around supporting vocals. If you're rapping over Jersey Club, this is the lane that gives you a clear vocal pocket without losing the bounce. Structurally, Jersey Club thrives on quick energy shifts. Dropouts, micro-breaks, and "hit moments" create transitions for dancers and verse setups for rappers. But the overall feel stays loop-friendly — that's why the genre is built for short-form video. The same 8-bar loop that works as a dance break can work as a TikTok audio. That dual functionality is part of why Jersey Club has become one of the most globally distributed underground club genres in the world. Whether you're chasing dance-first Jersey Club for choreography and viral content, rap-first Jersey Club for high-energy verses and hooks, harder Jersey Drill hybrid records, or classic chopped-vocal club tracks, this collection is built to put working Jersey Club beats in front of you fast. Filter by tempo, key, vibe, and producer; stream what catches your ear; download what fits your direction. If you're already making Jersey Club, upload your tracks — the platform's built to put independent club producers, dancers, and rappers in front of fans, DJs, and the wider BTR community.