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Industry

How Streaming Platforms Pay Artists: The Industry Explained (2026)

Streaming platforms pay through a revenue-share pool, not a fixed rate per play. Here's how the money actually flows from a stream to an artist in 2026.

Abhiraj Singh
Abhiraj Singh
Founder & CEO · 2 June 2026 · 8 min read
How Streaming Platforms Pay Artists: The Industry Explained (2026)

Streaming platforms don't pay a fixed amount per play — they pool all their subscription and ad revenue, then divide it among rights-holders based on each artist's share of total streams. So your payout depends not just on your streams, but on the platform's total revenue and everyone else's streams too. Understanding this "pro-rata pool" model explains why per-stream rates move around and why the same song earns differently on different platforms.

The money's journey, from stream to artist

  1. Listeners pay the platform (subscriptions) or generate ad revenue (free tier).
  2. The platform keeps its cut (roughly 30%) and puts the rest into a royalty pool.
  3. The pool is split by stream share — your streams as a percentage of all streams.
  4. Your share is paid to the rights-holders: the recording owner (via your distributor) and the songwriters (via publishing).
  5. Your distributor collects the recording portion and pays you, minus its fee.

Why per-stream rates vary

The two royalty streams in every play

A single stream actually pays two different sets of people: the recording side (the owner of the master, usually you or your label) and the publishing side (the songwriter and composer). Your distributor handles recording royalties; publishing is collected separately. This is why how royalties work can feel complicated — there are genuinely two systems.

What this means for you

You can't change the pool model, but you can maximise your slice: keep more of your royalties with a good distributor, collect both recording and publishing royalties, lean into higher-paying platforms as well as high-reach ones, and grow real streams over time. The model rewards artists who build a durable, engaged audience.

Frequently asked questions

How do streaming platforms pay artists?

They pool subscription and ad revenue, keep their cut (around 30%), and divide the rest among rights-holders based on each artist's share of total streams — a pro-rata pool, not a fixed rate per play.

Is there a fixed pay-per-stream rate?

No. Because payment is a share of a revenue pool, the effective per-stream rate changes with the platform's total revenue, listener countries, and plan types. Quoted rates are averages, not fixed prices.

Why does the same song earn different amounts on different platforms?

Each platform has different revenue, pricing, and free-vs-paid mixes. Apple Music has no free tier, so its average per-stream tends to be higher than Spotify's, for example.

Who gets paid from a single stream?

Two sides: the recording owner (you or your label, via your distributor) and the songwriters and composers (via publishing royalties). They're collected through separate systems.

How does my distributor fit in?

Your distributor collects the recording-royalty portion of your stream share from each platform and pays it to you, minus its fee or commission. Publishing royalties are collected separately.

How can I maximise my streaming income?

Keep more of your royalties with a good distributor, collect both recording and publishing royalties, promote on higher-paying as well as high-reach platforms, and steadily grow a real, engaged audience.

Abhiraj Singh
Abhiraj Singh
Founder & CEO

Abhiraj has spent 18 years inside the Indian music and live entertainment business. Early in his career he worked with artists who are now household names — Guru Randhawa, Badshah, and Honey Singh — back when they were still building their first audiences. Today he runs Grootin, helping independent artists and labels across India get their music onto every major streaming platform in the world.

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