What Is a Performing Rights Organization and Do You Need One?
Performing Rights Organizations (PROs) collect and distribute royalties when music is performed publicly. For songwriters, composers, and producers, PRO membership is essential for capturing performance income. This guide explains how PROs work, which one to choose, and how to maximize your royalties.
What Is a PRO?
Definition
A Performing Rights Organization represents songwriters, composers, and music publishers to collect performance royalties. They license music to businesses and organizations that use music publicly, then distribute collected fees to rights holders.
What They Do
| Function | Description |
|---|---|
| Licensing | Grant rights to use music publicly |
| Collection | Gather fees from licensees |
| Distribution | Pay royalties to members |
| Monitoring | Track public performances |
| Advocacy | Protect members' rights |
When Performance Royalties Are Generated
| Use Type | Examples |
|---|---|
| Radio airplay | FM, AM, satellite, internet radio |
| TV broadcasts | Shows, commercials, films |
| Live performances | Concerts, clubs, festivals |
| Streaming | Spotify, Apple Music, etc. |
| Public venues | Restaurants, bars, retail |
| Digital media | YouTube, podcasts, apps |
Major US PROs
ASCAP
Founded: 1914 Type: Member-owned, non-profit Membership: 850,000+ Market share: ~38%
Features:
- Writer membership: Free
- Publisher membership: $50
- Quarterly distributions
- Live performance reporting
- Mobile app for setlists
Strengths:
- Strong in pop and rock
- Good live performance system
- Member discounts
- Established reputation
BMI
Founded: 1939 Type: Non-profit Membership: 1.2 million+ Market share: ~38%
Features:
- Writer membership: Free
- Publisher membership: $150-$250
- Quarterly distributions
- Live performance reporting
- Songview catalog search
Strengths:
- Strong in hip-hop and R&B
- Large catalog
- Good international relations
- Writer-friendly policies
SESAC
Founded: 1930 Type: For-profit, invitation only Membership: 30,000+ Market share: ~12%
Features:
- Invitation-only membership
- No membership fees
- Quarterly distributions
- Personal service
- Selective roster
Strengths:
- Higher payouts per member
- Personal attention
- Strong in specific genres
- Exclusive feel
GMR (Global Music Rights)
Founded: 2013 Type: For-profit Membership: Selective Market share: ~12%
Features:
- Invitation/apply
- Represents major catalogs
- Aggressive licensing
- Higher rates
Strengths:
- Represents huge catalogs
- Strong negotiating power
- Premium payouts
- Modern approach
Choosing a PRO
Can You Join Multiple?
In the US:
- Writers: Can only join one PRO at a time
- Publishers: Can join multiple
- Switching: Possible with notice period
Internationally:
- Different rules apply
- Reciprocal agreements exist
- May need multiple memberships
Selection Criteria
| Factor | Consideration |
|---|---|
| Genre | Which PRO represents your style? |
| Career stage | Emerging vs. established |
| Live performance | How important is live reporting? |
| International | Global collection needs |
| Personal preference | Culture, service, reputation |
Comparison
| Feature | ASCAP | BMI | SESAC | GMR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joining | Open | Open | Invite | Invite/Apply |
| Writer fee | Free | Free | Free | Free |
| Publisher fee | $50 | $150-$250 | Free | Varies |
| Distribution | Quarterly | Quarterly | Quarterly | Quarterly |
| Live reporting | Yes | Yes | Yes | Limited |
| Minimum payout | $1 | $1 | Varies | Varies |
How PROs Collect and Distribute
Collection Process
Licensees pay PROs:
| Licensee Type | How They Pay |
|---|---|
| Radio stations | Annual fee based on revenue |
| TV networks | Blanket license |
| Streaming services | Percentage of revenue |
| Venues | Based on capacity/music use |
| Restaurants/bars | Based on size/music use |
Collection internationally:
- PROs have reciprocal agreements
- Your PRO collects abroad
- Takes longer, fees apply
- Not all territories covered equally
Distribution Process
How royalties are calculated:
Radio:
- Based on station reporting
- Weighted by market size
- Time of day factors
- Survey-based for smaller stations
TV:
- Based on cue sheets
- Network pays more than local
- Theme music pays more
- Background pays less
Live:
- Must report setlists
- Venue size matters
- Ticket price factors
- Supporting documentation helps
Streaming:
- Based on stream counts
- Pro-rata distribution
- Fractions of cents per stream
- Combined with mechanical
Payment Timeline
| Performance Type | Time to Payment |
|---|---|
| Radio | 6-9 months |
| TV | 6-12 months |
| Live | 6-12 months |
| Streaming | 3-6 months |
| International | 12-24 months |
Registering Your Works
What to Register
Register all original compositions:
- Songs you wrote
- Beats you produced (if you have writing credit)
- Co-writes
- Instrumental compositions
- Cues and themes
What NOT to register:
- Covers (unless you arranged)
- Samples (original writer registers)
- Public domain works
- Work for hire (if agreement specifies)
Registration Process
Information needed:
| Field | Description |
|---|---|
| Title | Song title |
| Writers | All composers/lyricists |
| Publishers | Publishing companies |
| Splits | Ownership percentages |
| ISWC | International Standard Musical Work Code |
| Duration | Length of song |
| Genre | Style category |
How to register:
- Online portal
- Bulk upload
- Mobile app (some PROs)
- Third-party services
Importance of Accurate Registration
Consequences of errors:
- Delayed payments
- Wrong amounts
- Unclaimed royalties
- Disputes with co-writers
- Lost income
Best practices:
- Register immediately upon release
- Update with any changes
- Use consistent titles
- Include all writers
- Verify splits
Maximizing PRO Income
Live Performance Reporting
Why it matters:
- Significant income source
- Often underreported
- Direct control
- Relatively high per-performance
How to report:
- Setlists with dates
- Venue information
- Ticket prices
- Supporting documentation
Tools:
- ASCAP OnStage
- BMI Live
- Setlist.fm
- Personal records
Cue Sheets for TV/Film
What they are:
- Document listing all music in production
- Timing and usage details
- Submitted by production company
Your role:
- Ensure accurate information
- Follow up with production
- Verify submission
- Correct errors
International Collection
How it works:
- Your PRO collects via foreign PROs
- Takes 12-24 months
- Fees deducted
- Not all territories covered
Maximizing international:
- Ensure proper registration
- Register with foreign PROs if needed
- Monitor statements
- Claim uncollected royalties
Unclaimed Royalties
Search for:
- Unclaimed works
- Misattributed works
- International collections
- Back royalties
Where to search:
- Your PRO's unclaimed portal
- SoundExchange (for recordings)
- The MLC (for mechanicals)
- Foreign PRO databases
PRO vs. Other Royalty Sources
PRO (Performance Royalties)
What they collect:
- Public performances
- Radio airplay
- TV broadcasts
- Live performances
- Streaming (performance portion)
What they don't collect:
- Mechanical royalties
- Sync fees
- Master use fees
- Direct sales
SoundExchange
What they collect:
- Digital performance royalties
- Satellite radio
- Internet radio
- Cable TV music channels
For:
- Recording artists
- Sound recording copyright owners
Different from PRO:
- PROs collect for compositions
- SoundExchange collects for recordings
- Both may be owed
The MLC
What they collect:
- Mechanical royalties from streaming
- Interactive streaming
For:
- Songwriters
- Publishers
Different from PRO:
- PROs: Performance
- MLC: Mechanical reproduction
Publisher/Administrator
What they do:
- Collect all royalty types
- Administer catalog
- Pitch for sync
- Register works
When to use:
- Complex catalog
- International needs
- Multiple revenue streams
- Administrative burden
Common Mistakes
Registration Mistakes
- Not registering: Missing royalties
- Late registration: Delayed payments
- Inaccurate splits: Disputes and lost income
- Missing co-writers: Incomplete payments
- Wrong titles: Unmatched performances
Membership Mistakes
- Joining multiple writer PROs: Not allowed
- Not joining as publisher: Missing publisher share
- Switching without notice: Interrupted payments
- Not updating contact info: Unclaimed royalties
Collection Mistakes
- Not reporting live: Lost income
- Ignoring statements: Missing errors
- Not monitoring international: Lost foreign royalties
- Not claiming unclaimed: Money left behind
Do You Need a PRO?
Yes, If:
- You write original music
- Your music is performed publicly
- You want to collect performance royalties
- You have songs released
- You perform live
- You want to protect your rights
Maybe Later, If:
- You're just starting
- No public performances yet
- No released music
- Learning phase
Cost-Benefit
Membership costs:
- Writer: Free (ASCAP, BMI)
- Publisher: $50-$250
- Time: Registration and reporting
Potential income:
- Radio hit: $10,000-$100,000+
- TV placement: $500-$10,000+
- Live performances: $10-$500+ per show
- Streaming: Fractions of cents, but accumulates
Verdict: For anyone with released music or public performances, PRO membership is essential and pays for itself.
Verdict
PROs are essential for songwriters and producers to collect performance royalties. Membership is free for writers, and the potential income far exceeds any costs or effort.
Key Takeaways:
- PROs collect performance royalties only
- Choose one US writer PRO
- Register all original works immediately
- Report live performances
- Monitor statements
- Claim international royalties
- Understand what PROs don't collect
- Consider publisher membership
- Keep registrations accurate
- Switch if unsatisfied (with proper notice)
PRO membership is a fundamental business requirement for music creators. The royalties you miss without PRO membership often exceed what you earn from direct sales.
FAQ
Q: What does a Performing Rights Organization actually collect on my behalf? A: A PRO collects performance royalties — fees paid by businesses (radio stations, TV networks, streaming services, venues, restaurants, etc.) for the public performance of musical compositions. These royalties are owed to the songwriter and music publisher. PROs do not collect mechanical royalties (paid for reproducing a composition) or sound recording royalties.
Q: Which PROs operate in the United States, and can I join more than one? A: The major U.S. PROs for songwriters and composers are ASCAP, BMI, SESAC, and GMR (Global Music Rights). As a writer, you may affiliate with only one PRO at a time in the U.S. for your writer membership. ASCAP is a member-owned non-profit; BMI converted to a for-profit company in 2022; SESAC and GMR are invitation-only.
Q: Does my PRO collect all my music royalties, or are there gaps? A: Significant gaps exist. PROs collect performance royalties for compositions only. Mechanical royalties for on-demand streaming in the U.S. are collected by the Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC), established under the Music Modernization Act of 2018. Digital performance royalties for non-interactive streaming services (such as SiriusXM satellite radio and Pandora's non-interactive radio) are collected by SoundExchange, which pays the sound recording owner and featured artist — not the songwriter directly.
Q: How do PROs know when to pay me — do they track every performance? A: PROs use a combination of data sources: broadcast monitoring (audio fingerprinting of radio and TV), digital reporting from streaming services, cue sheets from TV and film productions, and statistical sampling. Coverage is not perfectly comprehensive, particularly for smaller venues. Registering your works promptly and accurately in the PRO database helps ensure your royalties are tracked.
Q: When should I register my songs with a PRO? A: Register each song before it is released or performed publicly. Royalties are generally not paid retroactively for performances that occurred before the song was registered in the PRO system. Early registration prevents missed royalty payments.
Q: Do I need a publisher to collect publishing royalties through a PRO? A: No. If you are self-published, you can register as both a writer member and a publisher member (or affiliate through a self-publishing entity) with your PRO to collect both the writer's and publisher's share of performance royalties. Without a publisher affiliation, the publisher's share may remain uncollected or held.
Q: Can I switch PROs if I am unhappy with my current one? A: Yes. You can resign from your PRO and join another, but you must follow the PRO's resignation procedures and honor any required notice periods (typically one year). Royalties earned while you were affiliated with the original PRO remain due from that PRO.
Sources
- ASCAP — How Royalties Work: https://www.ascap.com/help/royalties-and-licensing/royalties
- BMI — How PRO Royalties Work: https://www.bmi.com/creators
- SoundExchange — About SoundExchange: https://www.soundexchange.com/about/
- Mechanical Licensing Collective — About the MLC: https://www.themlc.com/about
- Music Business Worldwide — PRO Guide: https://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com
Related Articles
- Music Royalties Accounting: How to Track and Collect All Earnings — PRO income is one of several royalty streams to track
- Music Copyright Law Explained: How to Protect Your Beats and Songs — PROs exist because of the copyright framework this article explains
- How to Collect All Your Music Royalties: Complete Checklist — PRO registration is step one on the royalty collection checklist
- Streaming Royalties Compared: Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Pay Rates — PRO royalties and streaming royalties are separate but both matter
- Music Copyright Registration: How to Register With U.S. Copyright Office — Registration and PRO enrollment should happen at the same time
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Performing Rights Organization (PRO) and what does it do?
A Performing Rights Organization (PRO) collects performance royalties on behalf of songwriters and music publishers when compositions are publicly performed — on radio, in streaming, at venues, on TV, or in other public settings. PROs negotiate blanket licenses with broadcasters, streaming services, and venues, then distribute collected royalties to registered members.
Which PRO should a songwriter or producer join — ASCAP, BMI, or SESAC?
ASCAP and BMI are the two largest US PROs and are open to new member registration without audition or invitation. ASCAP is a member-owned nonprofit; BMI is a for-profit organization. Both collect comparable royalties. SESAC is invitation-only and generally accepts artists with more established commercial track records.
Does a music producer need to join a PRO?
Producers who co-write songs (contributing melody, chords, or lyrics) must register with a PRO to collect performance royalties on those compositions. Producers who contribute production only without compositional elements do not need PRO membership for production-only work.
How do PROs know when your music is being played and collect royalties?
PROs collect royalty data through radio station cue sheets (required broadcast logs), music content identification technology (audio fingerprinting), blanket licensing agreements with streaming services, venue blanket licenses, and performance reports submitted by venue operators.
How much do PROs pay in royalties and how often?
Radio performances pay $0.04-$0.10 per spin depending on station size and time slot. Digital streaming performance royalties per stream are fractions of a cent but accumulate with volume. ASCAP pays quarterly; BMI pays quarterly for digital royalties and semi-annually for some other categories.
Can I be a member of two PROs simultaneously?
No — in the United States, composers and publishers can only be affiliated with one PRO at a time. You must resign from your current PRO before joining another. The decision of which PRO to join should be made carefully, considering which one better represents writers in your genre.
Do international PROs work together so that royalties cross borders?
Yes — PROs worldwide have reciprocal agreements through which they collect royalties on behalf of foreign PRO members when music is performed in their country. ASCAP has agreements with PROs in 100+ countries. Your ASCAP or BMI membership enables royalty collection in most international markets.