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Music Royalties Accounting: How to Track and Collect All Earnings

经过 Plugg Supply Team

Music Royalties Accounting: How to Track and Collect All Earnings

Music royalties are fragmented across multiple sources, organizations, and payment schedules. Producers and artists frequently leave money uncollected simply because they don't know where to look. This guide provides a comprehensive system for tracking and collecting all royalty earnings.

Understanding Royalty Types

Performance Royalties

What they are: Payments when music is performed publicly.

Sources:

  • Radio airplay
  • TV broadcasts
  • Streaming services
  • Live performances
  • Public venues (bars, restaurants, gyms)

Who collects:

  • Performing Rights Organizations (PROs)
  • ASCAP, BMI, SESAC (US)
  • PRS, GEMA, SACEM (international)

How paid:

  • Quarterly distributions
  • Based on performance monitoring
  • Split between songwriter and publisher

Mechanical Royalties

What they are: Payments for reproduction of music.

Sources:

  • Physical sales (CD, vinyl)
  • Digital downloads
  • Streaming (in US, via MLC)
  • Ringtones

Who collects:

  • Harry Fox Agency (physical/digital)
  • Mechanical Licensing Collective (streaming in US)
  • Publisher or administrator

How paid:

  • Per-unit or per-stream basis
  • Monthly or quarterly
  • Lower rates than performance

Synchronization (Sync) Royalties

What they are: Payments for music used with visual media.

Sources:

  • Film and TV
  • Commercials
  • Video games
  • YouTube
  • Trailers

Who negotiates:

  • Music publishers
  • Sync agents
  • Direct deals

How paid:

  • One-time fee
  • Negotiated per use
  • Often significant amounts

Streaming Royalties

What they are: Payments from streaming platforms.

Sources:

  • Spotify
  • Apple Music
  • Amazon Music
  • Tidal
  • YouTube Music

How calculated:

  • Pro-rata (share of total revenue)
  • User-centric (per-user allocation)
  • Varies by platform

Typical rates:

Platform Approximate per stream
Spotify $0.003-$0.005
Apple Music $0.005-$0.008
Tidal $0.012-$0.015
YouTube Music $0.001-$0.003

Neighboring Rights

What they are: Payments for public performance of sound recordings.

Sources:

  • Digital radio (SiriusXM, Pandora)
  • International broadcast
  • Some streaming

Who collects:

  • SoundExchange (US)
  • PPL (UK)
  • Similar organizations internationally

How paid:

  • 50% to copyright owner (label)
  • 45% to featured artist
  • 5% to non-featured musicians

Print Royalties

What they are: Payments for sheet music and lyric reproduction.

Sources:

  • Sheet music sales
  • Lyric websites
  • Songbooks

Who collects:

  • Publishers
  • Print licensing agents

The Royalty Collection System

Step 1: Register Everything

With PROs:

  • ASCAP, BMI, or SESAC (choose one)
  • Register as songwriter
  • Register as publisher (or use publishing administrator)
  • Register all songs
  • Update regularly

With MLC:

  • Register as songwriter
  • Claim unmatched royalties
  • Update catalog

With SoundExchange:

  • Register as artist
  • Register as copyright owner
  • Claim recordings

With Harry Fox Agency:

  • If self-publishing
  • For mechanical collection

Internationally:

  • Register with PROs in major markets
  • Use sub-publishers
  • Or use global publishing administrator

Step 2: Organize Your Catalog

Create a master database:

Field Purpose
Song title Identification
Writers Royalty splits
Publishers Collection responsibility
PRO registration numbers Tracking
ISWC International identification
Recordings Sound recording links
ISRC Recording identification
Release dates Timeline tracking
Placements Sync and other uses

Tools:

  • Spreadsheet (Google Sheets, Excel)
  • Songtrust
  • Kobalt
  • Administration services

Step 3: Monitor Performance

Tracking sources:

  • PRO statements (quarterly)
  • Distributor reports (monthly)
  • SoundExchange (quarterly)
  • MLC (monthly)
  • Sync agent reports

What to track:

  • Where music is used
  • How much earned
  • Trends over time
  • Unmatched royalties

Step 4: Claim Unmatched Royalties

What are unmatched royalties:

  • Royalties collected but not distributed
  • Missing or incorrect registration
  • Unclaimed funds

Where to check:

  • MLC Unclaimed Royalties Portal
  • PRO unclaimed funds
  • SoundExchange unclaimed
  • State unclaimed property offices

How to claim:

  • Prove ownership
  • Update registrations
  • Submit documentation
  • Follow up regularly

Step 5: Audit and Verify

Regular review:

  • Compare expected vs. actual
  • Check for missing payments
  • Verify royalty rates
  • Confirm splits are correct

When to audit:

  • Significant commercial success
  • Every 2-3 years as precaution
  • Suspicious statements
  • Major catalog changes

Setting Up Your Royalty System

Choose Your Tools

DIY approach:

  • Spreadsheets
  • Manual tracking
  • Free but time-consuming

Publishing administrator:

  • Songtrust
  • Kobalt
  • CD Baby Pro
  • Tunecore Publishing

Full publisher:

  • Traditional publishing deal
  • Higher commission
  • More services

Publishing Administrator Comparison

Service Commission Best For
Songtrust 15% Self-published songwriters
Kobalt Various Established writers
CD Baby Pro 15% Already using CD Baby
Tunecore Publishing 15% Already using Tunecore
BMI/ASCAP direct Membership fees DIY approach

Setting Up Accounts

Required accounts:

  1. PRO membership (ASCAP, BMI, or SESAC)
  2. Publishing entity (or administrator)
  3. SoundExchange
  4. MLC (if self-published)
  5. Distributor account

For international:

  • PRS (UK)
  • GEMA (Germany)
  • SACEM (France)
  • Or global administrator

Tracking and Accounting

Monthly Tasks

  • Download distributor statements
  • Update streaming numbers
  • Check for new placements
  • Reconcile payments

Quarterly Tasks

  • Review PRO statements
  • Check SoundExchange
  • Analyze trends
  • Update catalog registrations

Annual Tasks

  • Tax preparation
  • Catalog valuation
  • Registration audit
  • Unclaimed funds search
  • Strategy review

Financial Tracking

Income categories:

Category Source Frequency
Streaming Distributor Monthly
Performance PRO Quarterly
Mechanical MLC/HFA Quarterly
Sync Publisher/Agent Irregular
Neighboring SoundExchange Quarterly
Physical Distributor Monthly

Expense tracking:

  • Production costs
  • Marketing expenses
  • Professional fees
  • Equipment
  • Travel

Common Royalty Problems

Missing Payments

Causes:

  • Incorrect registrations
  • Missing PRO affiliation
  • Unclaimed funds
  • Wrong splits
  • Unreported usage

Solutions:

  • Verify all registrations
  • Check unclaimed funds
  • Audit statements
  • Follow up with payors

Incorrect Splits

Common errors:

  • Outdated agreements
  • Verbal agreements disputed
  • Co-writer disagreements
  • Publisher errors

Prevention:

  • Written split agreements
  • Register correct splits
  • Regular communication
  • Clear contracts

Unmatched Royalties

The problem:

  • Millions in uncollected royalties
  • Complex registration requirements
  • Multiple collection points

The solution:

  • Comprehensive registration
  • Regular claiming
  • Publishing administrator
  • Persistent follow-up

Maximizing Royalty Income

Increase Usage

Strategies:

  • More releases
  • Playlist placement
  • Sync licensing
  • Covers by other artists
  • International distribution

Optimize Collection

Strategies:

  • Register everywhere
  • Use publishing administrator
  • Monitor statements
  • Claim unclaimed funds
  • Audit regularly

Protect Your Rights

Strategies:

  • Copyright registration
  • Proper contracts
  • Monitor unauthorized use
  • Enforce your rights
  • DMCA takedowns

Tools and Resources

Royalty Tracking Tools

Tool Purpose Cost
Songtrust Publishing admin 15%
Kobalt Publishing Various
Royalty Exchange Buy/sell royalties Fees
Excel/Sheets DIY tracking Free

PROs and Collection

Organization Type Website
ASCAP PRO ascap.com
BMI PRO bmi.com
SESAC PRO sesac.com
SoundExchange Neighboring rights soundexchange.com
MLC Mechanical themlc.com
Harry Fox Mechanical hfa.harryfox.com

International Resources

Organization Territory
PRS for Music UK
GEMA Germany
SACEM France
SIAE Italy
JASRAC Japan
APRA AMCOS Australia/NZ

Verdict

Royalty collection requires organization, persistence, and attention to detail. The music industry makes collecting earnings unnecessarily complex, but systematic approaches ensure you receive what you've earned.

Key Takeaways:

  • Register with all relevant collection societies
  • Maintain accurate, up-to-date catalog information
  • Use publishing administrator for global collection
  • Monitor statements regularly
  • Claim unclaimed funds
  • Audit periodically
  • Keep detailed financial records
  • Understand different royalty types

The artists and producers who maximize royalty income treat it as a business function, not an afterthought. The money is there - the challenge is collecting it all.

FAQ

Q: Why are my royalty statements so confusing and delayed? A: Royalties move through multiple intermediaries: DSPs pay distributors, distributors pay labels, labels pay artists — each with their own reporting cycles. Publishing royalties flow through PROs, sub-publishers, and administrators. Standard industry reporting is quarterly, with payments following 3–9 months after the performance period ends. This is why you might receive 2024 Q1 royalties in late 2024 or even 2025.

Q: What's the difference between mechanical royalties and performance royalties? A: Mechanical royalties are paid for the reproduction of a composition — each download or interactive stream generates mechanicals. Performance royalties are paid when a composition is publicly performed — radio airplay, live performances, streaming (for songwriters). As a producer who also co-wrote the song, you earn both. As a producer of someone else's song, you typically earn neither (unless negotiated).

Q: How do I collect digital performance royalties that SoundExchange holds? A: Register directly at SoundExchange.com as both a featured artist (if your name appears on recordings) and as a rights owner (for master recordings you own). SoundExchange pays featured artists directly — labels cannot intercept these payments. Unclaimed royalties are held for 3 years before escheating to state unclaimed property funds.

Q: What's a "black box" in music royalties and how do I avoid losing money to it? A: Black box royalties are unmatched, unclaimed funds that collect in PROs and performing rights societies when they can't identify the correct rightsholders. Protect yourself: register every song you release with your PRO, register with all relevant collection societies, keep your catalog metadata (ISRC codes, IPI numbers) accurate, and register with Harry Fox Agency / MLC (Mechanical Licensing Collective) for U.S. mechanical royalties.

Q: Do I need a publishing administrator even if I'm an independent artist? A: Yes, if you have international releases. PRO membership collects domestic performance royalties, but international collections require reciprocal agreements with foreign societies — which a publishing administrator handles. Services like Songtrust ($99 setup fee + 15% of collected royalties) or TuneCore Publishing ($15.99/song/year) register your works globally and collect internationally.

Q: How often should I audit my royalty statements? A: Review your distributor dashboard monthly. Reconcile quarterly royalty statements against your records. Request a formal royalty audit (your right under most recording agreements) if you suspect significant underpayment — music attorneys typically handle audits for a percentage of recovered funds. Many contracts have a 2–3 year audit window, so don't delay if something seems wrong.

Q: What software or tools help track royalties across multiple revenue streams? A: Distributor dashboards (DistroKid, TuneCore, CD Baby) provide streaming data. Soundcharts and Chartmetric aggregate performance analytics. For comprehensive royalty accounting: Curve (formerly Paperchain), Exactuals, or traditional spreadsheets with monthly import from each source. Accounting software like QuickBooks with music industry templates works for smaller catalogs.

Sources


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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between mechanical royalties and performance royalties?

Mechanical royalties are paid to songwriters and publishers for the reproduction of a composition — generated each time a song is streamed, downloaded, or pressed. Performance royalties are paid when a composition is publicly performed — through radio airplay, streaming radio, live performances, and TV broadcast.

How do producers track streaming royalties across multiple platforms?

Streaming royalties are tracked through your music distributor for master recording income, and through your PRO or publishing administrator for composition performance royalties. Accounting platforms like Songtrust, Curve Royalties, or DISCO consolidate multiple royalty streams into unified dashboards.

What is an ISRC code and why do producers need one?

An ISRC (International Standard Recording Code) is a unique identifier for a specific sound recording. Every song release needs its own ISRC, which streaming platforms use to track plays and attribute royalties correctly. Distributors typically issue ISRCs automatically when you upload music.

How do I find out if I have uncollected music royalties?

Check your distributor's royalty dashboard, your PRO account, your SoundExchange account, and the Music Reports portal. Many artists have uncollected foreign royalties simply due to not being registered in certain markets.

How often do music distributors pay out royalties?

Most major distributors pay monthly, typically 1-3 months after the reporting period. DistroKid, TuneCore, and CD Baby all pay monthly. PROs pay quarterly (ASCAP) or semi-annually (BMI). SoundExchange pays quarterly. The lag between streams occurring and money arriving is typically 2-6 months.

What is a publishing administrator and do independent producers need one?

A publishing administrator (Songtrust, CD Baby Pro) registers your compositions with international performance organizations and collects mechanical and performance royalties worldwide, typically for 15-20% of what they collect. Independent producers who release music internationally should use one.

Can music producers receive royalties for beats played on streaming without being on the track?

If a producer co-wrote the composition (contributing melody, chords, or lyrics), they share in publishing royalties from streams of that composition. Production-only contributions earn master royalties through producer points agreements, not publishing royalties.

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