Netflix’s Roommates arrived on April 17, 2026, as one of the streamer’s most talked-about original comedies of the year. Directed by Chandler Levack and produced under Happy Madison Productions, the film stars Sadie Sandler, Chloe East, Natasha Lyonne, Nick Kroll, Carol Kane, and Megan Thee Stallion, among others. But beyond the performances, Roommates lands as a musically rich experience — one where the score and an eclectic, carefully curated needle-drop playlist do as much storytelling as the script itself.
The original score was composed by the Holladay Brothers — Ryan Holladay and Hays Holladay — while music supervisors Bryan Bonwell and Kevin Grady assembled the film’s impressive range of licensed tracks. From indie darlings to pop anthems, the Roommates soundtrack is a layered, genre-spanning listen that perfectly mirrors the film’s emotional arc.
Roommates Soundtrack Overview
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Film | Roommates |
| Director | Chandler Levack |
| Studio | Happy Madison Productions |
| Platform | Netflix |
| Film Runtime | 107 minutes |
| Netflix Release Date | April 17, 2026 |
| Composers | Ryan Holladay & Hays Holladay |
| Music Supervisors | Bryan Bonwell & Kevin Grady |
| Label | Netflix Music |
| Score Album Release | April 17, 2026 |
| Total Score Tracks | 24 |
| Score Runtime | Approx. 25 minutes |
Netflix Music released the official Roommates soundtrack album on April 17, 2026 — the same day the film premiered exclusively on Netflix. The album contains the complete original score composed by Ryan Holladay and Hays Holladay, and is available for streaming and download across all major digital music platforms including Amazon Music.
The score for Roommates leans into a warm, emotionally grounded sonic palette that mirrors the film’s central relationship — the push-and-pull of a college friendship that quietly unravels. The Holladay Brothers bring their trademark blend of textural, mood-driven composition to the project, keeping the score understated but emotionally precise. Alongside the original score, the film features an extensive licensed soundtrack curated by music supervisors Bryan Bonwell (Hustle) and Kevin Grady (Hustle), pulling together a tracklist that spans indie rock, hip-hop, pop, and alternative — anchored by prominent needle drops from Olivia Rodrigo, Charli XCX, The Killers, and The Offspring, among many others.
Who Composed the Roommates Soundtrack?
Ryan Holladay

Ryan Holladay is a Los Angeles-based composer, sound artist, and producer who frequently collaborates with his brother Hays Holladay. The two grew up outside Washington, D.C., and later played together in a band while living in New York. Ryan is an NYU graduate, a 2013 TED Fellow, and a 2014 Aspen Ideas Scholar.
Together, the Holladay Brothers have garnered critical acclaim as sound pioneers and multi-dimensional storytellers, earning early recognition for their location-aware music composition — music created and mapped to physical landscapes, released as mobile apps, using GPS to dynamically alter the listening experience as the listener moves through a space. Their debut project in this form was mapped to the National Mall in Washington, D.C.
Ryan and Hays have also created sound installations and immersive experiences for Dolby, Bose, and the U.S. Embassy in London, where their work is now part of the permanent art collection.
On the film side, Ryan’s scoring credits include the HBO documentary Class Action Park (with Hays) and the 2025 horror thriller Weapons — a collaboration with director Zach Cregger that earned the brothers significant attention in the film music world.
Hays Holladay

Hays Holladay is a composer, mixing engineer, and sound designer with experience spanning film, podcasts, interactive music, and commercial production. His credits include the HBO documentary Class Action Park and the 2025 horror film Weapons, directed by Zach Cregger. He has also composed, mixed, and produced music for Dolby, Bose, Air Jordan, and the Smithsonian, as well as numerous podcasts including Masters of Scale and Your Undivided Attention.
For Weapons, the brothers described their approach as rooted in instinct and textural exploration — a process that blurs the boundaries between sound design and music. That same philosophy carries into Roommates, where the score functions more as emotional texture than traditional cinematic underscore.
Roommates Official Score Tracklist
The following 24-track score album was released by Netflix Music on April 17, 2026, as confirmed by Film Music Reporter.
| Song Number | Track Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Disorientation | 1:51 |
| 2 | Feeling It | 0:56 |
| 3 | It All Started | 1:03 |
| 4 | Free Floating | 1:03 |
| 5 | The Ballad of Devon & Celeste | 1:37 |
| 6 | Unread | 1:30 |
| 7 | Louise | 0:47 |
| 8 | Pop the Question | 1:09 |
| 9 | Swingset | 0:56 |
| 10 | Michael | 0:59 |
| 11 | In the Stacks | 0:40 |
| 12 | Must Be Nice | 0:33 |
| 13 | Broken Project | 0:45 |
| 14 | Gigi | 0:31 |
| 15 | Celeste to the Rescue | 1:17 |
| 16 | Empty Room | 1:10 |
| 17 | Pink Porcelain | 0:34 |
| 18 | I Wasn’t There Yet | 0:46 |
| 19 | Mascot | 0:57 |
| 20 | WaltonCon | 1:13 |
| 21 | Eavesdropping | 0:36 |
| 22 | Firefight | 2:19 |
| 23 | Barely There | 1:21 |
| 24 | Change of Plans | 0:47 |
Netflix’s Roommates Score Highlights
“Disorientation” (Track 1, 1:51) is the longest opening track on the album and immediately establishes the film’s emotional tone — the anxious, uncertain energy of a freshman arriving somewhere unfamiliar. It sets the listener off-balance in exactly the right way.
“The Ballad of Devon & Celeste” (Track 5, 1:37) is the emotional centerpiece of the score. The title alone reflects the film’s core dynamic, and the Holladay Brothers use the track to build warmth before it’s later complicated by the film’s escalating tension.
“Firefight” (Track 22, 2:19) is the longest and most dramatic cue on the album. Running over two minutes — significantly longer than most tracks on the record — it marks the score’s emotional and narrative climax, scoring what the film builds toward across its entire runtime.
“Louise” (Track 7) and “Gigi” (Track 14) are notably named after supporting characters in the film, suggesting these intimate cues were composed specifically to underscore those character moments — a compositional choice that speaks to how closely the Holladays worked with the film’s emotional beats.
“Empty Room” (Track 16, 1:10) brings quiet devastation to what is presumably the film’s most emotionally hollow stretch — a moment where something between the two leads is irrevocably broken.
Roommates Licensed Songs and Needle Drops
The following needle drops are confirmed from Vague Visages’ verified scene-by-scene breakdown. Music supervisors Bryan Bonwell and Kevin Grady curated one of the more eclectic licensed soundtracks of any 2026 Netflix release.
| Song | Artist | Scene Context |
|---|---|---|
| “300 Dreams” | After | Opening sequence / Walton University montage |
| “Glide” | Neikid x Portugal. The Man | Celeste arrives at orientation |
| “Write a List of Things to Look Forward To” | Courtney Barnett | Devon arrives at Walton University |
| “Archie, Marry Me” | Alvvays | Celeste decorates her dorm room |
| “Slide Tackle” | Japanese Breakfast | Devon agrees to go out with Celeste |
| “Int’l Players Anthem (I Choose You)” | UGK feat. Outkast | House party arrival scene |
| “The Spins” | Mac Miller & Empire of the Sun | House party sequence continues |
| “Mrs Magic” | Strawberry Guy | Devon walks campus with Michael |
| “Legs” | Boyish | Devon video chats with her mother |
| “Sword” | Ian Sweet | Devon scrolls Michael’s social media |
| “Two Princes” | Spin Doctors | Devon and Celeste at a restaurant |
| “Big Fat Mouth” | Arlie | Devon wakes up at home; transition back to campus |
| “Marcel” | Her’s | Dr. Schilling transition sequence |
| “Mr. Brightside” | The Killers (Brandon Flowers et al.) | Devon showers and sings; later during karaoke scene |
| “Stress Relief” | Late Night Drive Home | Amber talks to Celeste in the dorm |
| “Ride the Horse” | Vanilla Ice, Forgiato Blow & Cowboy Troy | “Trailer Trash Party” sequence |
| “Pretty Fly (For a White Guy)” | The Offspring | House party; Devon chats with Michael |
| “Teen Angst” | Inji | Spring break social media sequence |
| “Drivers License” | Olivia Rodrigo & Daniel Nigro | Spring break karaoke — character sings Rodrigo’s 2021 hit |
| “Mind Loaded” | Blood Orange feat. Lorde, Caroline Polacek & Mustafa | Devon returns to campus in tears |
| “Heads Will Roll (A-Trak Remix)” | Yeah Yeah Yeahs | Devon talks to Alex; campus event transition |
| “Jaime” | King Princess | Devon finishes her presentation |
| “Change” | Alex G | Dr. Schilling discusses Devon burning her dorm room |
| “Girl, So Confusing” | Charli XCX | Film’s final moments and end credits |
| “Walk with Me” | Sadie Sandler | Post-credits, after “Girl, So Confusing” |
Additional confirmed songs from the film:
- “Ralph Lauren” — Frost Children, Baby Morocco
- “When It’s Us” — Tiffany Topol
- “Summer of My Life” — Claud
- “It’s Ya Birthday Night, No Rules” — Dwight “Father Times” Benjamin
- “In the Bag” — Jade Josephine
- “Anyway” — ekat19
- “Supersad” — Suki Waterhouse
- “Right Now” — Mindflip
- “Starburst” — Danny Brown
- “Slow Dances” — Winnetka Bowling League
- “Also Sprach Zarathustra, Op. 30” — Richard Strauss
Holladay Brothers Composer Filmography
| Year | Project | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | The Three Sessions | Film | Early credit (Hays Holladay) |
| 2021 | Class Action Park | HBO Documentary | Ryan & Hays Holladay |
| 2022 | Barbarian | Film (contributions) | Cues contributed alongside Anna Drubich’s score |
| 2025 | Weapons | Feature Film | Ryan & Hays Holladay with Zach Cregger |
| 2025 | Abelina, Vol. 1 | Video Game Soundtrack | Ryan Holladay |
| 2026 | Roommates | Netflix Feature Film | Ryan & Hays Holladay |
Where to Stream the Roommates Soundtrack?
The Roommates film streams exclusively on Netflix, where it premiered on April 17, 2026. The official score album, released by Netflix Music, is available across all major digital platforms — including Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, and other streaming services worldwide.
Fans looking to own or download the score can also find it on Amazon. Whether you’re revisiting a favorite scene or discovering the Holladay Brothers’ work for the first time, the Roommates soundtrack is a straightforward stream away.
FAQs
Who composed the Roommates soundtrack?
The original score for Roommates was composed by brothers Ryan Holladay and Hays Holladay, known for their previous collaboration on the 2025 horror thriller Weapons and the HBO documentary Class Action Park.
How many tracks are on the Roommates score album?
The official score album contains 24 tracks, with a total runtime of approximately 25 minutes. It was released by Netflix Music on April 17, 2026.
When was the Roommates soundtrack released?
The soundtrack album was released on April 17, 2026, coinciding with the film’s Netflix premiere.
Where can I stream the Roommates soundtrack?
The score album is available on all major streaming platforms including Spotify, Apple Music, and Amazon Music. The film itself streams exclusively on Netflix.
What are the most notable songs in Roommates?
Key needle drops include “Girl, So Confusing” by Charli XCX (end credits), “Drivers License” by Olivia Rodrigo (spring break karaoke scene), and “Mr. Brightside” by The Killers (shower scene and karaoke reprise). Sadie Sandler also contributes an original song, “Walk with Me,” which plays over the post-credits.
Who are the music supervisors for Roommates?
The music supervisors are Bryan Bonwell and Kevin Grady, both of whom previously collaborated on the Netflix film Hustle.
What is the longest track on the Roommates score?
“Firefight” (Track 22) is the longest cue at 2 minutes and 19 seconds, representing the score’s dramatic peak.