The Best Albums of 2026 So Far
A running list of the year's best albums, updated as new records arrive. Informed by consensus across Pitchfork, The Quietus, Stereogum, Brooklyn Vegan, Paste, and Uproxx — but weighted toward records that hold up beyond the first week of coverage. 2026 has been a strong year for indie rock, sleeper debuts, and long-awaited returns: Basement came back after eight years, Friko delivered a worthy sophomore album, and Nate Amos of This Is Lorelei assembled one of the most impressive cover albums in recent memory. The critical darling so far is Aldous Harding, whose near-unanimous approval across every major outlet makes it the consensus pick for album of the year at the halfway mark.
The New Zealand art-pop eccentric's fifth album is her most understated — and her most fully realised. Supported by pedal steel, harp, and the production of John Parish, Harding's ten songs feel like dispatches from somewhere slightly outside ordinary experience: lucid, strange, deeply felt. It has received near-universal critical acclaim across every major outlet, with Pitchfork, The Quietus, Brooklyn Vegan, and Paste all placing it at the top of their 2026 lists so far. The consensus pick for album of the year at the halfway mark, and the kind of record that reveals new things on every listen.
Find on Amazon →Chicago's Friko follow up their acclaimed debut with a sophomore album produced by John Congleton that captures the pandemonium of young adulthood in nine songs that swing between anthemic and intimate. Comparisons to early Arcade Fire and Sufjan Stevens are frequent and not unearned — the band write songs with the earnestness of people who still believe in the power of a well-placed chord change. Listed on both Stereogum's 200 most anticipated albums of 2026 and Pitchfork's spring preview. "Seven Degrees" is their finest single yet. A record that leaves the kind of impression more associated with bands with far longer histories.
Find on Amazon →Nate Amos — the songwriter behind This Is Lorelei and co-founder of Water From Your Eyes — has spent two years accumulating enough credibility in the indie world to assemble one of the great cover albums of recent memory. The Super Deluxe edition of his 2024 breakthrough pairs his original recordings with versions by Waxahatchee, MJ Lenderman, Hayley Williams (via her new project Power Snatch), Jeff Tweedy, SASAMI, Snail Mail, and Tim Heidecker, among others. Every cover is a genuine reimagining rather than a tribute, and the roster reads like a who's who of where indie is right now. Flood Magazine called it "an album's worth of covers that meet the heights of the original recordings."
Find on Amazon →Steven Hyden at Uproxx called this "the indie sleeper of 2026," and it's a fair description. Mildred are a Bay Area four-piece whose debut album sounds like David Berman relocated to northern California and started listening to The Band and CSNY — low-key, highly observational folk-rock character studies recorded live in a room, full of small moments that land big the more you spend time with them. No leader, no hierarchy, just four musicians with natural chemistry and something genuine to say. The kind of record that builds slowly and then one day you realise you've listened to it fifteen times.
Find on Amazon →Joyce Manor's seventh album, produced by Bad Religion's Brett Gurewitz, is their most Southern California-sounding record — which is saying something for a band that has always been the quintessential SoCal punk act. Lead single "All My Friends Are So Depressed" reached number 22 on Billboard's Alternative Airplay chart, the band's first radio hit. The album is nine songs, none of them overstaying their welcome, with an ease and confidence that suggests a band who know exactly what they do well. Their Coachella sets this year confirmed the record live — an excellent addition to an already strong catalogue.
Find on Amazon →Eight years between albums. A return to their original label. A producer (John Congleton) who has made some of the decade's finest alt-rock records. Basement's fifth album is a hard reset — sharper and more self-assured than the records that preceded it, with a rawness that their Fueled By Ramen era sometimes lacked. Critics at Kerrang!, DIY, Distorted Sound, and New Noise all gave it four stars or better. The band's post-hardcore and emo roots are present throughout, but WIRED is also a record about maturity and growth that rewards listeners who stuck around through the long wait. "Time Waster" opens with a cymbal crash and never fully lets you breathe until "Summer's End" closes it out.
Find on Amazon →The D'Addario brothers continue their mission to keep 1970s power pop alive with fourteen more sparkling gems leaning into lushly orchestrated bubblegum and harmony-rich hooks that feel simultaneously of another era and completely timeless. Pitchfork scored it an 8.0, placing it among the year's top-rated albums. For the first time, the D'Addarios brought in their live band to record alongside them, and the difference is audible: there's a looseness and generosity here that their earlier records, excellent as they are, occasionally lacked.
Find on Amazon →The Toronto collective's long-awaited return brings back the sprawling, anthemic quality that made their early 2000s records so influential — all layered guitars, brass, and voices stacked until they become something communal and overwhelming. Pitchfork scored it a 7.7. The band's political and communal instincts are present throughout, but the record's most lasting quality is its warmth: this is music made by people who have been through things together and still believe in what they're doing together.
Find on Amazon →Little Simz follows her Mercury Prize-winning run with a record that consolidates her position as one of the most important voices in British music — lyrically dense, musically inventive, and emotionally direct in a way that her more ambitious productions sometimes obscured. The critical reception has been strong across the board, with The Quietus placing it among their April highlights. A sharp, assured addition to one of the decade's most consistent catalogues.
Find on Amazon →The Swedish pop auteur explores the emotional wreckage that comes after the lights come up — vulnerable electro-pop that hits right in the chest, and a confident step forward from the more diffuse work of her recent years. Li has always been at her best when the sadness feels earned rather than performed, and The Afterparty is her most emotionally direct album in years. Widely praised across Paste, Pitchfork, and Brooklyn Vegan as one of the year's most fully realised pop records.
Find on Amazon →Surprise-released on Halloween 2025, the debut from Snocaps — Katie Crutchfield (Waxahatchee) and her twin sister Allison Crutchfield, with MJ Lenderman and producer Brad Cook — is one of those records that arrived with no fanfare and immediately felt essential. Thirteen songs of headstrong, tender indie-rock that recalls Allison's band Swearin' and Katie's early Waxahatchee records — warmly scrappy, melodically unstoppable, and built on the specific chemistry that only siblings who've been playing music together since their teens can produce. Pitchfork called it one of the year's essential releases on arrival. The band announced it would be put on ice after a handful of shows, which makes it feel all the more worth cherishing.
Find on Amazon →Turnover's first album since 2022's Myself in the Way arrives independently — the Virginia band departing Run For Cover after more than a decade — and early singles "Nightjar" and "I See You and Realize" suggest a record that synthesises their dream-pop and shoegaze evolution with the sharpness of their early punk work. Produced by their longtime live engineer Zac Montez, it's the first Turnover album to capture the energy of their live show on record. Following their 2025 Peripheral Vision 10th Anniversary Tour, which played the biggest venues of their careers, the timing feels right: a band who have found their footing and are ready to move forward.
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