Who are the best post-hardcore bands right now? It’s a slippery question with hundreds of answers. The sound can be traced back to Fugazi, Hüsker Dü, and Minutemen, who built on hardcore’s aggressive sound and DIY approach through deeper, more sophisticated arrangements that kept its heavy bite. In the time since, post-hardcore has only grown beyond its mid-’80s inception, becoming a scene that exploded in size and stature in the 2000s. Because each generation puts its own spin on the genre, we asked our readers to name the greatest doing it in 2026. Their responses spanned early 2000s favorites to the new guard. As ever, though, only a handful could make the cut, and you can find the top fan picks ranked below.
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5. I Promised the World
I Promised the World are bringing fresh blood to post-hardcore. Based out of Denton, Texas’ booming scene, the band bring touches of screamo, emo, and metalcore to the genre’s foundation, resulting in a sound both intensely emotional and visceral — somewhere in the vein of Glassjaw’s EYEWTKAS or Hopesfall’s A Types. Over the past few years, they’ve grown fast, jumping on tours with Koyo and Deafheaven, plus an upcoming run with the Devil Wears Prada. They also signed to Rise Records for their powerful self-titled EP, after countless comparisons to the label’s 2000s roster, and plan to record their debut full-length in May.
4. Thrice
At this point, Thrice are post-hardcore elders, making their name through technicality, tireless drive, and the ability to balance aggression with moments of beauty. Forming in the late ’90s, they went on to define the 2000s scene with canonical records like 2002’s The Illusion of Safety and 2003’s The Artist in the Ambulance. Even when they perfected a heavy formula, they never stopped challenging themselves — as seen on their companion albums Horizons/East and Horizons/West. Frontman Dustin Kensrue says it best: “Every time we make a new album, we give it everything we have… We have a blast, we pull our hair out a bit, and we come through it all with something we are really proud of.”
3. Static Dress
Static Dress straddle many different worlds within alternative, also making our best modern emo bands poll. However, they’re firmly rooted in post-hardcore, using it as a launching pad for all of their other influences — emo, electronic, and John Carpenter, to name a few. It’s all wickedly immersive and sharply detailed, guided by enough worldbuilding to make their band an impressive multimedia project. After finishing a tour with Underoath, Static Dress recently signed to Sumerian Records and released “human props,” where frontman Olli Appleyard named At the Drive-In’s Relationship of Command as one of its key influences.
2. L.S. Dunes
L.S. Dunes are one of the newer groups on this list, but all of the members have a rich history within the alternative scene. They reference many different touchstones, but post-hardcore is in their bones, brilliantly encapsulated on Past Lives’ “Bomb Squad” or Violet’s “Fatale Deluxe” and title track. If you want a rehash of the spaces that they dominated during the early 2000s and onward, though, you’ll be sorely disappointed. This is a group that only look forward: “This is the present,” Tucker Rule told us during their cover story interview. “We have our other bands, but this one reminds us to be here now.”
1. Lower Definition
Lower Definition’s fans really showed out for this poll, grabbing the top spot. The San Diego-bred band emerged in the early 2000s, winning a spot on the Taste of Chaos tour through a MySpace contest and featuring Pierce the Veil’s Vic Fuentes on an early demo. However, it was 2008’s The Greatest of All Lost Arts that gave them a cult following — as well as a way back to each other after breaking up in 2011. They played a reunion show for its 10th anniversary in 2018 and officially got back together two years later. The band recently returned with the self-released The Purpose of the Moon, their first album in almost 20 years.
