Bonobo (musician) Audience in Germany

Bonobo (musician) logo

Bonobo (musician) has an estimated audience of 312,559 people in Germany. 48.1% are female, 51.9% are male, average age 33.3. Top regions: Nordrhein-Westfalen, Bayern, Baden-Württemberg.

The average Bonobo (musician) fan in Germany is 33.3 years old, balanced, and lives primarily in Nordrhein-Westfalen. The audience is concentrated in Nordrhein-Westfalen, Bayern, Baden-Württemberg.

Category: Music & Radio · Type: Person · Subtype: DJ

Demographics of Bonobo (musician) fans

Demographic split for Bonobo (musician) audience in Germany
MetricValue
Female48.1%
Male51.9%
Average age33.3
Estimated audience size312,559

Top regions in Germany

Top regions ranked by reach for Bonobo (musician) in Germany
RegionReachAffinity
Nordrhein-Westfalen74,5671.09×
Bayern50,0111.0×
Baden-Württemberg47,3471.11×
Niedersachsen29,0740.96×
Hessen26,0551.09×
Berlin17,8451.28×
Rheinland-Pfalz16,0841.03×
Sachsen15,6081.02×
Schleswig-Holstein10,1520.9×
Brandenburg8,5020.88×
Hamburg8,3161.18×
Thüringen6,8200.86×
Sachsen-Anhalt6,6330.82×
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern4,9820.83×
Saarland4,0021.04×
Bremen2,4530.92×

Worldwide distribution

Worldwide audience distribution share by country for Bonobo (musician)
CountryShare
France38.7%
United States25.1%
Japan3.3%

See Bonobo (musician) audiences in other countries

More DJ audiences in Germany

How to read this data

Audience size is the estimated number of people in Germany who actively search for Bonobo (musician). Affinity is an over-index ratio: 2.0× means the audience is twice as likely to engage with that brand or trait as the country average. Reach is the estimated number of audience members in a region. Regional and brand-affinity tables are sorted from strongest signal to weakest.

About this audience profile

This audience profile is generated by Rascasse from anonymized search-behavior signals across Germany. For methodology see methodology. Affinity values are over-index ratios vs. the country average (1.0 = baseline). Audience sizes are estimated, not measured.