Top 100 Social Distancing and Quarantine Songs: Isolation, Lockdown, Survival, and Staying-Home Playlist
Social distancing and quarantine songs became a strange little pop-culture category during the COVID-19 era. Some songs were written directly about lockdowns, isolation, anxiety, distance, and trying to stay hopeful. Others were older songs that suddenly sounded brand new because their titles accidentally matched the moment a little too well.
This list mixes serious pandemic-era songs, funny title matches, lonely classics, survival anthems, “don’t touch me” songs, homebound songs, medical-theme songs, and tracks that captured the feeling of being cut off from friends, work, crowds, concerts, parties, and normal life. Some are sincere. Some are darkly comic. Some became playlist jokes because humor was one of the few things people could safely share without wiping it down first.
The page is not meant to make light of illness or loss. The COVID-19 pandemic was difficult, frightening, and life-changing for many people. Music became one way people coped with uncertainty, boredom, grief, loneliness, anxiety, and the odd reality of living through history while also wondering if there was any more toilet paper.
Use this social distancing playlist for pandemic retrospectives, quarantine memories, “stuck at home” playlists, isolation songs, survival songs, or a reminder that popular music has always had a song title ready for almost anything. Even germs had a soundtrack. Rude, but true.
Best Social Distancing and Quarantine Songs
These are the strongest starting points for a quarantine playlist because they either fit the pandemic era directly, became natural social-distancing jokes, or captured the loneliness, fear, humor, and resilience of staying apart.
- Don’t Stand So Close to Me – The Police
- Level of Concern – Twenty One Pilots
- Do What You Can – Bon Jovi
- Living in a Ghost Town – The Rolling Stones
- Six Feet Apart – Luke Combs
- Work from Home – Fifth Harmony featuring Ty Dolla $ign
- It’s the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine) – R.E.M.
- U Can’t Touch This – MC Hammer
- Dancing with Myself – Billy Idol
- Stayin’ Alive – Bee Gees
- I Will Survive – Gloria Gaynor
- Alone – Heart
- So Lonely – The Police
- Don’t Come Around Here No More – Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
- Keep Your Hands to Yourself – Georgia Satellites
Quarantine Songs by Style
Songs Written for the COVID Era
Some quarantine songs were written directly in response to the pandemic, lockdowns, social distancing, essential workers, isolation, and public anxiety. These songs belong at the center of the page because they were not just repurposed for the moment; they came from it.
Twenty One Pilots released Level of Concern in April 2020, right as quarantine life became a shared experience for millions of listeners. Bon Jovi’s Do What You Can spoke to helping others, first responders, and essential workers. The Rolling Stones’ Living in a Ghost Town started before the pandemic but was finished in isolation and landed with eerie timing.
- Level of Concern – Twenty One Pilots
- Do What You Can – Bon Jovi
- Living in a Ghost Town – The Rolling Stones
- Six Feet Apart – Luke Combs
- Six Feet Apart – Alec Benjamin
- When Life Is Good Again – Dolly Parton
- Life in Quarantine – Benjamin Gibbard
- Gotta Be Patient – Michael Bublé, Barenaked Ladies & Sofía Reyes
- Quarantine Together – Drive-By Truckers
- Nowhere to Go (Quarantine Love) – Snow Tha Product
- Mask, Gloves, Soap, Scrubs – Todrick Hall
- Let Your Love Be Known – Bono
Social Distancing Songs and “Stay Away” Classics
Some older songs became perfect social distancing playlist picks because the titles suddenly sounded like public-health reminders. These are the songs for keeping distance, avoiding crowds, staying apart, and saying “not today” with a backbeat.
- Don’t Stand So Close to Me – The Police
- U Can’t Touch This – MC Hammer
- Keep Your Hands to Yourself – Georgia Satellites
- Stand Back – Stevie Nicks
- Don’t Come Around Here No More – Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
- Get Off of My Cloud – The Rolling Stones
- Stay Away – Randy Newman
- Stay Away – Nirvana
- I Love You Don’t Touch Me – Ray Benson & Katie Shore
- Hands Clean – Alanis Morissette
- Hands to Myself – Selena Gomez
- I Can’t Get Next to You – The Temptations
Isolation, Loneliness, and Missing People
Quarantine made loneliness feel more common and more visible. Songs about isolation, distance, missing someone, and being stuck with your own thoughts became especially relatable when social calendars, concerts, work routines, and ordinary visits all vanished at once.
- Alone Again (Naturally) – Gilbert O’Sullivan
- Alone – Heart
- One – Three Dog Night
- Tired of Being Alone – Al Green
- I Drink Alone – George Thorogood & The Destroyers
- I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry – Hank Williams
- So Lonely – The Police
- When You’re Alone – Bruce Springsteen
- I Get Lonely – Janet Jackson
- Owner of a Lonely Heart – Yes
- I Think We’re Alone Now – Tommy James & The Shondells / Tiffany
- I Am a Rock – Simon & Garfunkel
- Isolation – John Lennon
- Isolation – Joy Division
- Only the Lonely (Know the Way I Feel) – Roy Orbison
Survival, Hope, and “We’ll Get Through This” Songs
Not every quarantine song needs to be lonely. Some songs became useful because they gave people a little lift, a little stubbornness, or a reason to keep going. During a hard stretch, even a familiar chorus could feel like backup.
- Stayin’ Alive – Bee Gees
- I Will Survive – Gloria Gaynor
- O-o-h Child – The Five Stairsteps
- Rise Up – Andra Day
- Don’t Give Up – Peter Gabriel & Kate Bush
- I’m Still Standing – Elton John
- That’s Life – Frank Sinatra
- Better Days – OneRepublic
- Grateful – Jewel
- We Gon’ Be Alright – Tye Tribbett
- This Too Shall Pass – Mike Love featuring John Stamos
- Don’t Fear the Reaper – Blue Öyster Cult
Health, Medicine, Fever, and Germy Song Titles
Some quarantine playlist picks worked because of medical words, illness imagery, or titles that suddenly felt too relevant. The songs are not all about public health, but the titles made them impossible to ignore during lockdown culture.
- I Want a New Drug – Huey Lewis & The News
- Fever – Peggy Lee
- Bad Medicine – Bon Jovi
- Rockin’ Pneumonia and the Boogie Woogie Flu – Johnny Rivers
- Cat Scratch Fever – Ted Nugent
- Doctor Doctor – Thompson Twins
- Toxic – Britney Spears
- Down with the Sickness – Disturbed
- Catch My Disease – Ben Lee
- Social Disease – Elton John
- Contagious – Avril Lavigne
- Fever – The Black Keys
- Virus – Iron Maiden
- Doctor My Eyes – Jackson Browne
- Hospital Beds – Florence + The Machine
Work from Home, Staying Home, and Too Much Time Indoors
For many people, quarantine turned home into an office, gym, restaurant, classroom, movie theater, and suspiciously frequent snack location. These songs fit the homebound side of the pandemic years.
- Work from Home – Fifth Harmony featuring Ty Dolla $ign
- Stay at Home – Men at Work
- Stay Home – Big & Rich
- Too Much Time on My Hands – Styx
- Do You Wanna Do Nothing with Me – Lawrence
- All by Myself – Céline Dion
- Bored – Tessa Violet
- On Our Own – Bruno Major
- Tryin’ to Keep It Together – Norah Jones
- Quarantine Clean – Turbo, Gunna & Young Thug
Empty Cities, Closed Parties, and Strange Streets
One of the defining images of quarantine was the empty public place: quiet downtowns, closed bars, silent streets, dark venues, and places that normally had life but suddenly felt paused. These songs capture that eerie side of the era.
- Living in a Ghost Town – The Rolling Stones
- When the Party’s Over – Billie Eilish
- No More Parties in L.A. – Kanye West
- Downtown’s Dead – Sam Hunt
- Seen the Lights Go Out on Broadway – Billy Joel
- Gimme Shelter – The Rolling Stones
- Shelter from the Storm – Bob Dylan
- Through Glass – Stone Sour
- From a Distance – Bette Midler
- Stop Making Sense – Talking Heads
- The Earth Died Screaming – Tom Waits
Overlap note: Quarantine songs often fit more than one mood. Don’t Stand So Close to Me is a social distancing joke and a rock classic. Stayin’ Alive is survival, disco, and extremely useful hand-washing tempo trivia. Work from Home went from pop hit to accidental job-description anthem with no warning whatsoever.
Top 100 Social Distancing and Quarantine Songs
- Don’t Stand So Close to Me – The Police
- Level of Concern – Twenty One Pilots
- Do What You Can – Bon Jovi
- Living in a Ghost Town – The Rolling Stones
- Six Feet Apart – Luke Combs
- Work from Home – Fifth Harmony featuring Ty Dolla $ign
- It’s the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine) – R.E.M.
- U Can’t Touch This – MC Hammer
- Dancing with Myself – Billy Idol
- Stayin’ Alive – Bee Gees
- I Will Survive – Gloria Gaynor
- Alone – Heart
- Alone Again (Naturally) – Gilbert O’Sullivan
- One – Three Dog Night
- It’s Been Awhile – Staind
- Out of Touch – Daryl Hall & John Oates
- I Want a New Drug – Huey Lewis & The News
- Tired of Being Alone – Al Green
- Bring Me to Life – Evanescence
- Leave Me Alone – Michael Jackson
- Don’t Come Around Here No More – Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
- Keep Your Hands to Yourself – Georgia Satellites
- Stand Back – Stevie Nicks
- I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry – Hank Williams
- Fever – Peggy Lee
- O-o-h Child – The Five Stairsteps
- When It’s Over – Sugar Ray
- Hands Clean – Alanis Morissette
- Behind the Mask – Michael Jackson
- So Lonely – The Police
- So Fresh, So Clean – Outkast
- Bad Medicine – Bon Jovi
- Rockin’ Pneumonia and the Boogie Woogie Flu – Johnny Rivers
- Here I Go Again – Whitesnake
- Here Without You – 3 Doors Down
- Come Out and Play – The Offspring
- I Can’t Get Next to You – The Temptations
- I Believe That We Will Win – Pitbull
- When the Party’s Over – Billie Eilish
- Get Off of My Cloud – The Rolling Stones
- Cat Scratch Fever – Ted Nugent
- When You’re Alone – Bruce Springsteen
- Livin’ on the Edge – Aerosmith
- I Get Lonely – Janet Jackson
- Don’t Start Now – Dua Lipa
- Stuck with You – Huey Lewis & The News
- Better Days – OneRepublic
- Owner of a Lonely Heart – Yes
- Stay Away – Randy Newman
- I Want to Hold Your Hand – The Beatles
- Just Breathe – Pearl Jam
- Do You Wanna Do Nothing with Me – Lawrence
- I Think We’re Alone Now – Tommy James & The Shondells
- I Am a Rock – Simon & Garfunkel
- You Are Not Alone – Michael Jackson
- Isolation – John Lennon
- From a Distance – Bette Midler
- Stay Away – Nirvana
- Six Feet Apart – Alec Benjamin
- Seen the Lights Go Out on Broadway – Billy Joel
- So Far Away – Carole King
- I Miss You – Blink-182
- Human Touch – Bruce Springsteen
- Doctor Doctor – Thompson Twins
- Help! – The Beatles
- Through Glass – Stone Sour
- It’s Gonna Be Lonely – Prince
- Mama Told Me Not to Come – Three Dog Night
- Stay at Home – Men at Work
- In the Air Tonight – Phil Collins
- Somebody That I Used to Know – Gotye featuring Kimbra
- Someday We’ll Be Together – Diana Ross & The Supremes
- Too Much Time on My Hands – Styx
- Gimme Shelter – The Rolling Stones
- Rise Up – Andra Day
- Lonely People – America
- Go Your Own Way – Fleetwood Mac
- Oh My My – Ringo Starr
- Let’s Go Crazy – Prince
- I Wanna Be Sedated – The Ramones
- Stay Home – Big & Rich
- Gotta Be Patient – Michael Bublé, Barenaked Ladies & Sofía Reyes
- All by Myself – Céline Dion
- Isolation – Joy Division
- Don’t Give Up – Peter Gabriel & Kate Bush
- Dear God – XTC
- So Far Away – Dire Straits
- Hold On, We’re Going Home – Drake
- People, I’ve Been Sad – Christine and the Queens
- Nothing Else Matters – Metallica
- Only the Lonely (Know the Way I Feel) – Roy Orbison
- A Lonely Night – The Weeknd
- To Be So Lonely – Harry Styles
- Toxic – Britney Spears
- Downtown’s Dead – Sam Hunt
- Shelter from the Storm – Bob Dylan
- Down with the Sickness – Disturbed
- That’s Life – Frank Sinatra
- When Life Is Good Again – Dolly Parton
- I’m Still Standing – Elton John
More Quarantine Songs Worth Hearing
The main Top 100 keeps the strongest mix together, but these songs also fit pandemic playlists, isolation songs, lockdown memories, social distancing jokes, and stay-at-home listening.
- My Life – Billy Joel
- Catch My Disease – Ben Lee
- Mad World – Tears for Fears
- If I Could Turn Back Time – Cher
- Hands to Myself – Selena Gomez
- Are You Lonesome Tonight? – Elvis Presley
- No More Parties in L.A. – Kanye West
- I Melt with You – Modern English
- Canary in a Coal Mine – The Police
- Solitude – Billie Holiday
- Leave Me Alone (I’m Lonely) – P!nk
- Lonely – Diplo & Jonas Brothers
- Social Disease – Elton John
- I’m Going Slightly Mad – Queen
- Bored – Tessa Violet
- After Rain – Dermot Kennedy
- Lonely Weekend – Kacey Musgraves
- Drinking Alone – Carrie Underwood
- Missing You – John Waite
- It’s Not the Same Anymore – Rex Orange County
- Kiss Me Thru the Phone – Soulja Boy Tell ’Em featuring Sammie
- Quarantine Clean – Turbo, Gunna & Young Thug
- Antisocial – Ed Sheeran & Travis Scott
- Stay Clean – Motörhead
- Quarantine Together – Drive-By Truckers
- The Earth Died Screaming – Tom Waits
- The Loner – Neil Young
- I’ve Still Got My Health – Cole Porter
- Another One Bites the Dust – Queen
- Virus – Iron Maiden
- Doctor My Eyes – Jackson Browne
- 00:00 (Zero O’Clock) – BTS
- We Gon’ Be Alright – Tye Tribbett
- Hospital Beds – Florence + The Machine
- I’m Not OK – H.E.R.
- Lockdown Part II – The Dirty Knobs
- Nowhere to Go (Quarantine Love) – Snow Tha Product
- Let Your Love Be Known – Bono
- Get Well – Donna Missal
Social Distancing and Quarantine Songs Trivia
- The Library of Congress created a Performing Arts Response to COVID-19 Collection to document artistic responses to the pandemic, including music, scripts, videos, oral histories, and related materials.
- Level of Concern by Twenty One Pilots was released in April 2020 and quickly became one of the most recognizable mainstream songs directly tied to quarantine anxiety.
- Bon Jovi’s Do What You Can was tied to the early pandemic moment and focused on helping others, essential workers, and social distancing.
- The Rolling Stones released Living in a Ghost Town in April 2020 after finishing it while band members were in isolation, giving the song an unexpectedly perfect lockdown mood.
- Don’t Stand So Close to Me by The Police became one of the most obvious social distancing playlist jokes, mostly because the title did all the work.
- Stayin’ Alive by the Bee Gees had already been used in CPR-training discussions because of its tempo, which gave it a second layer of survival-song relevance during public-health playlist conversations.
- Work from Home by Fifth Harmony did not predict the pandemic, but the title became unavoidable when millions of people suddenly turned kitchen tables into offices.
- I Will Survive by Gloria Gaynor became a natural anthem for resilience playlists, and its title alone made it a pandemic-era fit.
- Quarantine playlists often worked because of title humor. A song did not have to be about COVID to become strangely perfect for the moment.
- Music helped people process the pandemic through humor, grief, anxiety, hope, nostalgia, and shared experience. Not a cure, but definitely better than staring at the sourdough starter again.
Why Quarantine Songs Still Matter
Social distancing and quarantine songs still matter because they capture a strange shared moment in modern life. Some were written directly in response to COVID-19. Others became accidental soundtrack picks because their titles, moods, or lyrics suddenly matched life under lockdown.
A strong quarantine playlist should mix direct pandemic songs, lonely classics, survival anthems, stay-away jokes, work-from-home songs, and hopeful tracks. Keep the tone humane: funny where appropriate, serious where needed, and honest about how strange the whole period felt. The songs remind us that even isolation became something people tried to sing through.
Sources for Social Distancing and Quarantine Music Context
- Library of Congress: COVID-19 pandemic songs and music subject guide
- Library of Congress: Performing Arts Response to COVID-19 Collection
- Billboard: Twenty One Pilots’ Level of Concern and quarantine references
- Howard Stern Show: Bon Jovi’s Do What You Can COVID-era release
- Pitchfork: The Rolling Stones release Living in a Ghost Town
- Deadline: The Rolling Stones’ Living in a Ghost Town and pandemic timing
- Library of Congress: Stories from the COVID-19 pandemic and cultural collections