Harry Styles has officially announced his fourth studio album, Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally., ending months of speculation with a clean, confident reveal. The album arrives March 6, 2026, via Erskine and Columbia Records, marking his first full-length solo release since Harry’s House in 2022. After four years of silence on the album front, Styles didn’t tease a comeback so much as calmly step back into the spotlight and remind everyone he still controls the room.

The announcement confirmed the album title, release date, artwork, and core creative team in one move. The record will feature 12 tracks and is produced by Kid Harpoon, Styles’ longtime collaborator and a constant presence across his solo catalog. There was no dramatic countdown, no chaotic rollout. Just facts, delivered with intention. For an artist who has spent the last few years dominating pop culture without releasing new music, that restraint speaks volumes.
A Quiet Build That Didn’t Feel Quiet at All
While the announcement itself was straightforward, the road to it was anything but accidental. In late December 2025, Styles released an eight-minute video titled Forever, Forever, featuring footage from the final night of his Love On Tour. The clip ended with a simple message: “We Belong Together.” No explanation followed, but fans understood the implication immediately.
Soon after, posters began appearing in major cities around the world bearing phrases like “We Belong Together” and “See You Very Soon.” The campaign extended online through an interactive website and a WhatsApp chat experience, encouraging fans to engage without revealing too much. It was subtle, global, and unmistakably deliberate. Styles let the anticipation do the heavy lifting, then stepped in once the moment was right.
When the announcement finally landed on January 15, 2026, it felt less like a surprise and more like confirmation of what everyone already knew: Harry Styles was ready to move forward.
The First Album After a Career-Defining Peak
Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally. follows Harry’s House, an album that solidified Styles as one of the defining pop artists of his generation. Released in 2022, Harry’s House earned critical acclaim and won Album of the Year at the 2023 Grammy Awards, setting a high bar for whatever came next.
That context matters. This new album is not a comeback from obscurity. It is a follow-up to a career peak. Styles has spent the years since touring globally, breaking attendance records, and expanding his presence in film, all while staying musically quiet. The gap between albums only sharpened expectations, and the announcement confirms he’s stepping back into music on his own terms.
What’s Confirmed and What Still Hasn’t Been Said
As of now, no singles have been released and the tracklist has not been made public. Physical formats, including vinyl, CD, cassette, and bundled editions, are already available for preorder. The album artwork shows Styles standing beneath a disco ball at night, wearing sunglasses, visually reinforcing the playful confidence suggested by the title.

While the name hints at disco influences, no official statements have been made about the album’s sound. That ambiguity feels intentional. Styles has built a career on genre fluidity, moving from rock-leaning pop to introspective minimalism without losing momentum. This album announcement doesn’t explain the next chapter. It simply opens the door.
March Can’t Come Fast Enough
With a confirmed release date and no excess noise surrounding it, Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally. already feels inevitable rather than promotional. Styles didn’t overpromise, didn’t overexplain, and didn’t need to. After four years away from albums, his return speaks for itself.
March 6, 2026 is locked in. The rest will unfold when it’s ready.