By Osvaldo
Music Publishing vs Music Distribution: What Every Artist Needs to Know

If you write and release your own music, two separate revenue systems are working at the same time. One pays you for the recording. The other pays you for the song itself. Music distribution handles the recording. Music publishing handles the composition. Most independent artists understand distribution because they use it every time they upload a track to Spotify or Apple Music. But publishing is where a significant share of revenue goes uncollected, especially for artists who do not realize they need to register their songs separately from their recordings. This guide explains the real difference between music publishing and music distribution, how the money flows, what each system actually pays, and what independent artists and labels need to do to collect everything they are owed.
Every song creates two copyrights
When you record a song, two separate copyrights come into existence. The first is the sound recording, also called the master. This is the actual audio file: the specific performance, production, and mix that you recorded. The second is the composition, also called the musical work. This is the underlying song: the melody, lyrics, and chord structure. These two copyrights are legally distinct. They generate separate revenue streams. They are collected by different organizations. And they are often owned by different people. A singer who writes their own songs owns both. A producer who writes a beat but does not perform the final track might own the composition but not the master. A label that signs an artist might own the master but not the composition. Understanding this split is the foundation of understanding why publishing and distribution are different.
What music distribution actually does
Music distribution is the process of delivering your sound recordings to streaming platforms, download stores, and other digital services. When you use a distributor like Forward Digital, DistroKid, TuneCore, or CD Baby, you are sending the master recording to Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, Beatport, Deezer, Tidal, YouTube Music, and other platforms. The distributor handles delivery, metadata formatting, ISRC code assignment, and royalty collection from those platforms. When someone streams your track on Spotify, the platform pays the distributor, and the distributor passes that money to you (minus any commission or fee). Distribution royalties represent roughly 80% of total streaming revenue. This is the larger share, which is why most artists focus on it first. Distribution fees vary: DistroKid charges $22.99/year for unlimited uploads with 0% commission. TuneCore charges per release with 0% commission. CD Baby takes a one-time fee plus 9% of revenue. Forward Digital operates on a label services model with distribution, analytics, contracts, payouts, and content protection in one platform.
What music publishing actually does
Music publishing is the process of registering, licensing, and collecting royalties for the composition. When your song is streamed, performed on radio, played in a bar, used in a TV show, or covered by another artist, the composition generates royalties that are completely separate from what the distributor collects. Publishing royalties represent roughly 20% of total streaming revenue. That sounds small compared to the 80% on the master side, but globally, music publishing generated $13.6 billion in collections in 2024 according to CISAC, up 7.2% year over year. Digital royalties alone crossed $5.4 billion for the first time. For an independent artist who writes their own songs, that 20% is money that belongs to them but will go uncollected unless they take specific steps to register their compositions.
How the money actually flows when a song is streamed
When someone streams a song on Spotify, the platform divides the revenue into two pools. Roughly 80% goes to the master recording side. This is paid to the distributor or label, who then pays the artist. Roughly 20% goes to the composition side. This 20% is further split into two types of royalties. The first type is mechanical royalties, which in the US are set at 15.3% of streaming service revenue in 2026 under the Phonorecords IV settlement between the NMPA, NSAI, and DiMA. These are collected by The Mechanical Licensing Collective (The MLC) in the US and paid to publishers and songwriters. The second type is performance royalties, collected by PROs (ASCAP, BMI, SESAC in the US, PRS in the UK, SACEM in France, GEMA in Germany, SGAE in Spain, SOCAN in Canada). Performance royalties are always split 50/50 between the songwriter and the publisher. If you self-publish, you receive both halves.
Publishing vs distribution: the key differences
Distribution handles the master recording. Publishing handles the composition. Distribution delivers audio files to streaming platforms. Publishing registers songs with collection societies worldwide. Distribution collects recording royalties (roughly 80% of streaming revenue). Publishing collects composition royalties (roughly 20% of streaming revenue). Distribution requires uploading tracks and metadata. Publishing requires registering song titles, writers, splits, and publisher information with PROs and mechanical collection agencies. Distribution is handled by companies like Forward Digital, DistroKid, TuneCore, and CD Baby. Publishing is handled by publishers, publishing administrators like Songtrust, Sentric, or TuneCore Publishing, or by the artist themselves if they self-publish through their PRO. You need both to collect 100% of the money your music generates. Distribution alone leaves roughly 20% of streaming revenue uncollected.
Do independent artists need a music publisher
You automatically own your publishing as soon as you create a song in a fixed form. You do not need a publisher to own your rights. But you do need to register your songs properly to collect the royalties. There are three main options. First, self-publishing: you register as both a songwriter and publisher with your PRO (ASCAP, BMI, SESAC, PRS, SACEM, GEMA, SGAE depending on your country). You then register each song with all the relevant collection societies. This costs nothing beyond PRO membership fees but requires significant administrative work, especially for international collections. Second, publishing administration: companies like Songtrust ($100 setup, 15-20% commission), Sentric (no setup fee, 20% commission), or TuneCore Publishing ($75 setup, 20% commission) handle registration with 60+ global collection societies on your behalf. You keep ownership of your songs and they collect your royalties worldwide for a percentage. Third, traditional publishing deal: a publisher acquires a share of your copyright (often 50% or more) in exchange for active song placement, sync licensing, and advance payments. This only makes sense if the publisher is actively working your catalog.
Why so much publishing revenue goes uncollected
The biggest reason independent artists miss publishing revenue is that they assume their distributor handles everything. It does not. Your distributor collects master recording royalties only. Publishing royalties flow through completely different organizations. If you have not registered with a PRO, you are not collecting performance royalties. If you have not registered with The MLC (in the US) or an equivalent mechanical collection society, you are not collecting mechanical royalties from streaming. If you have not registered your songs with collection societies in other countries (or used a publishing admin that does), you are not collecting international royalties. The result is that millions of dollars in publishing royalties go uncollected every year. The MLC alone reported holding over $400 million in unmatched royalties. That money belongs to songwriters who have not registered their works.
The steps to collect all your royalties
Step one: use a distributor for your master recordings. This gets your music on all streaming platforms and collects the roughly 80% master recording revenue. Forward Digital handles distribution, analytics, contracts, payouts, and anti-piracy protection in one platform for labels and artists. Step two: register with a PRO as both songwriter and publisher. In the US, join ASCAP (one-time $50 fee) or BMI (free). In the UK, join PRS. In France, SACEM. In Germany, GEMA. In Spain, SGAE. Register every song you have written. Step three: register with The MLC (US) or your country's mechanical collection society. This collects streaming mechanical royalties. Step four: consider a publishing administrator if you release music internationally. Services like Songtrust or Sentric register your songs with collection societies in 60+ countries. The commission is 15-20% but the alternative is leaving that money uncollected entirely. Step five: register with SoundExchange (US) for digital performance royalties on your recordings from non-interactive services like Pandora and SiriusXM. This is separate from both your distributor and your PRO.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between music publishing and music distribution? Distribution delivers your recordings to streaming platforms and collects master recording royalties (roughly 80% of streaming revenue). Publishing registers your compositions with collection societies and collects songwriting royalties (roughly 20% of streaming revenue). You need both to collect all the money your music generates. Can my distributor collect publishing royalties? No. Distributors only collect royalties for the master recording. Publishing royalties flow through PROs and mechanical collection societies, which are completely separate systems. Do I need a publisher if I am an independent artist? Not necessarily. You own your publishing automatically. But you do need to register with a PRO and mechanical collection societies, or use a publishing administrator, to actually collect the money. How much publishing revenue am I missing? If you have not registered with a PRO and The MLC or equivalent, you are likely missing roughly 20% of your total streaming revenue. Globally, The MLC holds over $400 million in unmatched royalties from songwriters who have not registered. What is the mechanical royalty rate for streaming in 2026? In the US, the headline mechanical rate is 15.3% of streaming service revenue under the Phonorecords IV settlement. This is the highest rate ever set for songwriters. How are performance royalties split? Performance royalties collected by PROs are always split 50% to the songwriter and 50% to the publisher. If you self-publish, you receive both halves.
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