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Music Copyright Registration: How to Register With U.S. Copyright Office

经过 Plugg Supply Team

Music Copyright Registration: How to Register With U.S. Copyright Office

Copyright registration with the U.S. Copyright Office provides legal advantages that automatic copyright protection cannot match. For music producers and artists, registration enables lawsuits, statutory damages, and attorney fee recovery. This guide walks through the complete registration process.

Why Register Your Copyright

Legal Advantages

Benefit Unregistered Registered
Basic protection Yes Yes
Sue for infringement No Yes
Statutory damages No Up to $150,000 per work
Attorney fees No Recoverable
Presumption of validity No Yes
Public record No Yes
Customs protection No Yes

When Registration Matters Most

Essential before:

  • Releasing commercially
  • Licensing to others
  • Sending demos
  • Posting online
  • Any public distribution

Critical if:

  • High commercial potential
  • Valuable catalog
  • Licensing revenue
  • Infringement risk

What Can Be Registered

Types of Music Works

Type Description Example
Sound recording The actual audio Master recording of song
Musical work Composition Sheet music, melody, lyrics
Both Combined Album with compositions

Registration Categories

Standard choices:

Form Use For
SR (Sound Recording) Recordings
PA (Performing Arts) Compositions
Both Album with both elements

Important:

  • Sound recording and composition are separate registrations
  • One registration per work (unless group)
  • Must be original
  • Must be fixed in tangible medium

Before You Register

Step 1: Ensure Eligibility

Requirements:

  • Original work
  • Fixed in tangible medium
  • Some creativity
  • Not public domain

What qualifies:

  • Original beats
  • Songs
  • Albums
  • Sound effects
  • Production elements

What doesn't qualify:

  • Ideas
  • Titles
  • Common chord progressions
  • Public domain works
  • Short phrases

Step 2: Gather Materials

For sound recording:

  • Audio file (MP3, WAV)
  • Title
  • Artist name
  • Release date
  • Creation date

For composition:

  • Audio file OR sheet music
  • Lyrics (if applicable)
  • Title
  • Composer names
  • Creation date

For both:

  • All of the above
  • Clear indication of both elements

Step 3: Determine Ownership

Sole authorship:

  • You created everything
  • You own 100%

Joint authorship:

  • Multiple creators
  • Equal or defined shares
  • All must be listed

Work for hire:

  • Employer owns
  • Specific agreement required
  • Different registration process

The Registration Process

Step 1: Create Account

Website:

  • copyright.gov
  • Click "Register"
  • Create login
  • Verify email

Step 2: Choose Registration Type

Options:

Type Cost Best For
Single application $45-$65 One work
Standard application $65 Most works
Group registration $65 Unpublished collections

Group registration (unpublished):

  • Up to 10 unpublished works
  • Same author(s)
  • Same ownership
  • $65 total

Group registration (published album):

  • Album as unit
  • Both SR and PA
  • Specific requirements
  • $65 total

Step 3: Complete Application

Required information:

Title:

  • Exact title
  • Alternate titles
  • Album title (if applicable)

Author(s):

  • Legal name
  • Pseudonym (if applicable)
  • Citizenship/domicile
  • Contribution (what they did)

Claimant:

  • Copyright owner
  • May differ from author
  • Transfer documentation if needed

Creation/Completion:

  • Year created
  • Date first published (if applicable)
  • Nation of first publication

Limitation of claim:

  • Preexisting material
  • Material excluded
  • New material claimed

Rights and permissions:

  • Contact for rights
  • Correspondent
  • Mail certificate to

Step 4: Deposit Copy

Upload requirements:

  • Audio file
  • MP3 preferred
  • Under 500MB
  • Clear quality

For compositions:

  • Audio OR sheet music
  • PDF for written materials

Step 5: Review and Pay

Fees (2026):

Filing Type Cost
Single application (one author, not work for hire) $45
Standard application $65
Paper filing $125
Group registration $65

Payment:

  • Credit card
  • Debit card
  • ACH transfer
  • Deposit account (for frequent filers)

Step 6: Submit

What happens:

  • Application queued
  • Review by Copyright Office
  • Questions may arise
  • Certificate mailed

After Submission

Processing Time

Filing Method Typical Time
Online 3-6 months
Paper 8-12 months
Expedited 5-10 business days (extra fee)

Possible Outcomes

Registration issued:

  • Certificate mailed
  • Registration effective from filing date
  • Public record created

Questions raised:

  • Copyright Office contacts you
  • Additional information needed
  • May require response

Refusal:

  • Rare
  • Reasons given
  • Can appeal or correct

Receiving Certificate

What you get:

  • Registration certificate
  • Registration number
  • Effective date
  • Work details

What to do:

  • Store safely
  • Note registration number
  • Add to records
  • Use © symbol with confidence

Special Situations

Registering an Album

Options:

Option 1: Individual registrations

  • Each track separately
  • More expensive
  • More protection

Option 2: Group registration

  • Album as unit
  • Both SR and PA
  • $65 total
  • Requirements:
    • Same author(s)
    • Published together
    • 10+ works
    • First time published

Registering Beats

Considerations:

  • Register before selling
  • Each beat is separate work
  • Group if unpublished
  • Update if sold exclusively

Timing:

  • Before posting online
  • Before selling licenses
  • Before sending to artists
  • Before any public distribution

Registering Collaborations

Process:

  • All authors listed
  • Ownership percentages
  • All must agree
  • One application

Documentation:

  • Split sheet recommended
  • Agreement on ownership
  • Clear roles defined

Registering Work for Hire

Requirements:

  • Written agreement
  • Before work begins
  • Specific WFH language
  • Proper category

Registration:

  • Employer/commissioner is claimant
  • Author may be different
  • Specific form required

Registering Samples

Important:

  • Can't register uncleared samples
  • Must have rights to all elements
  • Derivative work registration possible
  • Original sample owner retains rights

International Works

US registration:

  • Protects in US
  • Berne Convention provides international
  • Registration helps enforcement
  • Consider foreign registration for major markets

Maintaining Registrations

Record Keeping

Keep records of:

  • Registration certificates
  • Registration numbers
  • Dates
  • Works registered
  • Applications submitted

Updates

When to update:

  • Ownership transfer
  • Title change
  • Author changes
  • Publication

How to update:

  • Recordation of transfer
  • Supplementary registration
  • New application (if needed)

Costs and Budgeting

Fee Schedule

Service Cost
Single application $45
Standard application $65
Paper filing $125
Group registration $65
Additional certificates $55 each
Expedited processing $800+
Recordation of transfer $100+

Budgeting Strategy

For new releases:

  • Budget $65 per work
  • Or $65 per album (group)
  • Prioritize commercial releases
  • Consider bulk filing

For catalog:

  • Prioritize best/most valuable
  • Work backwards
  • Group where possible
  • Budget over time

Common Mistakes

Application Mistakes

  • Wrong category: SR vs. PA confusion
  • Incomplete information: Missing authors
  • Wrong claimant: Ownership errors
  • Poor deposit: Unacceptable file
  • Late filing: After infringement

Strategic Mistakes

  • Not registering: Missing protection
  • Registering too late: Can't sue for past infringement
  • Wrong work: Registering samples you don't own
  • Ignoring updates: Outdated information

Enforcement with Registration

After Infringement

What registration enables:

  • File lawsuit
  • Statutory damages ($750-$150,000)
  • Attorney fees
  • Injunctions
  • Customs protection

Timeline importance:

  • Before infringement: Full statutory damages
  • After infringement: Only actual damages
  • Within 3 months of publication: Full protection

Using Registration

In disputes:

  • Cite registration number
  • Provide certificate
  • Presumption of validity
  • Stronger negotiating position

Verdict

Copyright registration is essential for music creators seeking full legal protection. The process is straightforward, costs are reasonable, and the benefits significantly outweigh the effort.

Key Takeaways:

  • Register before releasing commercially
  • Online registration costs $45-$65
  • Process takes 3-6 months
  • Register both compositions and recordings separately
  • Group registration saves money for albums
  • Registration enables lawsuits and statutory damages
  • Keep certificates and records organized
  • Update for ownership changes
  • Consider foreign registration for international markets
  • Registration is an investment in your creative assets

Copyright registration transforms your music from merely protected to fully defensible. For professional creators, it's not optional - it's essential business practice.

FAQ

Q: Do I have to register my music with the U.S. Copyright Office to own the copyright? A: No. Copyright protection arises automatically when you create an original work and fix it in a tangible medium. However, registration is required before you can file an infringement lawsuit in U.S. federal court for works of U.S. origin, and it provides access to statutory damages and attorney's fees — remedies that are not available for unregistered works.

Q: How much does it cost to register music with the U.S. Copyright Office? A: Filing fees vary by application type. A single-author, single-work online registration using the eCO system costs $45 for the simplified online form. The standard online registration fee is $65. Paper submissions cost more. Group registration options exist for unpublished works and for published musical works that meet specific criteria, which can reduce the per-work cost significantly.

Q: What is the difference between registering a musical composition and a sound recording? A: A musical composition (melody, harmony, and lyrics) and a sound recording (the specific recorded performance) are two separate copyrightable works that require separate registrations if both are being registered and they have different ownership. If you are both the songwriter and the sole performer who recorded the song, you can register both on the same application.

Q: What does "statutory damages" mean, and why does registration affect them? A: Statutory damages allow a court to award a fixed amount of damages (currently $750 to $30,000 per work for non-willful infringement, up to $150,000 for willful infringement) without requiring the copyright owner to prove the actual financial harm caused by the infringement. To claim statutory damages, the work must have been registered before the infringement occurred, or within three months of first publication.

Q: How long does the U.S. Copyright Office take to process a registration? A: Processing times vary. Online registrations have generally been processed in a few months to over a year depending on current workload. The Copyright Office publishes current processing times on its website. The effective registration date is the date the Office receives the complete application, fee, and deposit — not the date the certificate is issued.

Q: What is a "deposit" and what do I need to submit? A: A deposit is a copy (or copies) of the work being registered, submitted along with the application and fee. For sound recordings, the deposit is typically a digital file or a physical CD. For unpublished musical compositions, a lead sheet or digital audio file is generally acceptable. The Copyright Office provides specific deposit requirements by work type.

Q: Can I register multiple songs in a single application? A: Yes, under certain conditions. The Copyright Office offers group registration for unpublished works (up to 10 works on one application) and group registration for published musical works (works published within a three-month period with the same author and claimant). Check the current Copyright Office circulars for eligibility requirements, as group registration rules have specific criteria.

Sources


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Frequently Asked Questions

How do you register music with the US Copyright Office?

Register through copyright.gov using the eCO (Electronic Copyright Office) system. Create an account, select the work type (sound recording, musical work, or both), complete the application form, pay the registration fee ($35-$65 for online registration), and upload a digital deposit copy of the work.

How much does it cost to copyright a song with the US Copyright Office?

Online registration through eCO costs $35 for a single work registration using the Standard Application. Registering an entire album as a collection of unpublished works can be done for a single $35-$65 fee, making it far more cost-effective than registering each track individually.

Should I register the composition, the sound recording, or both?

If you wrote the song and recorded it yourself, register both the musical work (composition) and the sound recording as separate copyright registrations, because they are two distinct intellectual properties with separate legal rights.

What is the difference between registering as a single work versus a collection?

A single work registration covers one song for $35-$65 online. A collection registration covers multiple unpublished works by the same author(s) for one fee — useful for registering a batch of beats or an unreleased album. Collection registration is only available for unpublished works.

How long does copyright registration take?

Online eCO registrations for simple applications take 3-7 months under normal circumstances. The US Copyright Office periodically experiences backlogs extending processing to 10-15 months. The registration date is the date the Office receives your complete application, not when the certificate is issued.

Does registering music copyright in the US protect it internationally?

US copyright registration provides enforceable rights in the United States. International copyright protection exists through the Berne Convention, which most countries have signed — your works are protected in 181+ countries automatically upon creation, with the US registration providing evidence of ownership.

Can I register a copyright for a beat I made using samples?

You can register a derivative work and receive copyright in your original contributions — the new arrangement, additional melodies, and production elements. However, you cannot claim copyright in the underlying sampled material. If the samples are not cleared, registering does not protect you from infringement claims from original rights holders.

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