Here are the 11 best thrash albums of 2025.

Thrash has not historically been known for its willingness to reinvent the wheel — when James Hetfield famously sang "full speed or nothing" on Metallica's "Motorbreath," he unwittingly summed up the subgenre's ethos.

Yet the bands on this list still found a way to keep their thrash formula sounding fresh more than 40 years after the Bay Area scene first took the metal world by storm.

READ MORE: The Best Thrash Metal Album of Every Year Since 1983

The Best Thrash Albums of 2025: A Mix of Old and Young

You'll see a few veteran heavy hitters on this list, including Testament (whose latest offering, Para Bellum, was named Loudwire's best metal album of 2025) and Swiss progressive thrashers Coroner, who returned after a 30-plus-year absence. Brazilian quartet Violator also returned after a 12-year break with the furiously catchy Unholy Retribution.

For the most part, though, the thrash albums on our year-end list came from younger acts. Costa Rican headbangers Chemicide dazzled on Violence Prevails, which features a cheeky nod to one of the genre's progenitors. Lafayette, Louisiana "haunted thrash" upstarts Void also impressed on their sophomore album, Forbidden Morals, blending dizzying technicality with horror-filled imagery and a healthy dose of camp.

READ MORE: The 40 Best Debut Thrash Albums of All Time

Old or young, the bands on this list share a few characteristics. There's the aforementioned "full speed or nothing" commitment, which means blazing riffs and whiplash-inducing drums galore. These bands have also found ways to tackle thorny subject matter — violence, class inequality, artificial intelligence — in a way that's sufficiently grave but never preachy. The world may be going to Hell in a handbasket, but at least we have a killer soundtrack in the meantime.

Read on to see the 11 best thrash metal albums of 2025.

These albums will wreck your neck and open up circle pits — and they're being dished out by bands from a bunch of different generations.

Entries written by Bryan Rolli (BR) and Joe DiVita (JD).

Gallery Credit: Loudwire Staff

Want more? See our full list of the best thrash album of each year since 1983!

A history of the best thrash metal albums, year by year.

Gallery Credit: Joe DiVita