In the years following its release,
Kid A attracted acclaim. In 2005,
Pitchfork wrote that it had "challenged and confounded" Radiohead's audience, and subsequently "transformed into an intellectual symbol of sorts ... Owning it became 'getting it'; getting it became 'anointing it'." In 2015, Sheffield likened Radiohead's change in style to
Bob Dylan's controversial move to rock music, writing that critics now hesitated to say they had disliked it at the time. He described
Kid A as the "defining moment in the Radiohead legend". In an article for ''Kid A's
20th anniversary, the Quietus'' suggested that the negative reviews had been motivated by
rockism, the tendency to venerate rock music over other genres. In a 2011
Guardian article about his negative
Melody Maker review, Beaumont wrote that though his opinion had not changed, "
Kid A status as a cultural cornerstone has proved me, if not wrong, then very much in the minority ... People whose opinions I trust claim it to be their favourite album ever." In 2014, Brice Ezell of
PopMatters wrote that
Kid A is "more fun to think and write about than it is to actually listen to" and a "far less compelling representation of the band's talents than
The Bends and
OK Computer". In 2016, wrote in
The Guardian: "At times,
Kid A is dull enough to make you fervently wish that they'd merged the highlights with the best bits of the similarly spotty
Amnesiac ... Yorke had given up on coherent lyrics so one can only guess at what he was worrying about."
Grantland credited
Kid A for pioneering the use of internet to stream and promote music, writing: "For many music fans of a certain age and persuasion,
Kid A was the first album experienced primarily via the internet – it's where you went to hear it, read the reviews, and argue about whether it was a masterpiece ... Listen early, form an opinion quickly, state it publicly, and move on to the next big record by the official release date. In that way,
Kid A invented modern music culture as we know it." In 2020,
Billboard wrote that the success of the "challenging"
Kid A established Radiohead as "heavy hitters in the business for the long run". In previous versions of the list,
Kid A ranked at number 67 (2012) and number 428 (2003). In 2005,
Stylus and
Pitchfork named
Kid A the best album of the previous five years, with
Pitchfork calling it "the perfect record for its time: ominous, surreal, and impossibly millennial". At the end of the decade,
Rolling Stone,
Pitchfork In 2025,
Rolling Stone named it the second-greatest album of the century so far, writing that it "foresaw a darker 21st century, one marked by fear, loneliness, dislocation, and technological advancements that only divide us further ... And 25 years later, there's near-universal sentiment that
Kid A is not only a towering achievement by the greatest band of its time, but also a warning call that went completely unheeded." "Idioteque" was named one of the best songs of the decade by
Pitchfork and
Rolling Stone, and
Rolling Stone ranked it number 33 on its 2018 list of the "greatest songs of the century so far". (*) designates unordered list
Later releases Radiohead left EMI after their contract ended in 2003. After a period of being
out of print on vinyl,
Kid A was reissued as a double LP on 19 August 2008 as part of the "From the Capitol Vaults" series, along with other Radiohead albums. In 2007, EMI released
Radiohead Box Set, a compilation of albums recorded while Radiohead were signed to EMI, including ''Kid A. The EMI reissues were discontinued after Radiohead's back catalogue transferred to
XL Recordings in 2016. In May 2016, XL reissued
Kid A on vinyl, along with the rest of Radiohead's back catalogue. An early demo of "The National Anthem" was included in the special edition of the 2017
OK Computer reissue
OKNOTOK 1997 2017. In February 2020, Radiohead released an extended version of "Treefingers", previously released on the soundtrack for the 2000 film
Memento, to digital platforms. On November 5, 2021, Radiohead released
Kid A Mnesia, an anniversary reissue compiling
Kid A,
Amnesiac and previously unreleased material. Radiohead promoted it with singles for the previously unreleased tracks "
If You Say the Word" and "
Follow Me Around".
Kid A Mnesia Exhibition, an interactive experience with music and artwork from the albums, was released on November 18 for
PlayStation 5,
macOS and
Windows. Screenings of the 1922 silent film
Nosferatu set to
Kid A took place in the UK in October 2025. == Track listing ==