Distribute
Global DistributionRoyalty SplitsAnalytics & InsightsYouTube Content IDLife-Lock PlanPre-Save & Fan LinksCatalog Migration
For Labels
Label ManagementCatalog ManagementRoyalty TrackingContracts & Rights
PricingLoudr ↗
LoginStart Free
Industry

Music Copyright in India: A Plain-English Guide for Artists (2026)

Your song is automatically copyrighted the moment you create it in India. Here's what that protects, the three copyrights in every song, and how to register for stronger proof.

Abhiraj Singh
Abhiraj Singh
Founder & CEO · 2 June 2026 · 8 min read
Music Copyright in India: A Plain-English Guide for Artists (2026)

In India, your song is protected by copyright automatically the moment you create it in a fixed form — you don't have to register or pay anything for that protection to exist. Registration is optional, but it gives you much stronger proof of ownership if there's ever a dispute. This guide explains, in plain English, what copyright protects in a song, who owns it, and whether you should register.

This is general information, not legal advice — for a specific dispute, talk to a lawyer.

The three copyrights inside one song

A single song actually contains up to three separate copyrights, each protecting a different creative element under the Copyright Act, 1957:

This is why royalties can flow to different people for the same song: the writer, the composer, and the recording owner can all be owed money.

Automatic protection vs registration

Copyright exists automatically — the moment your original song is recorded or written down, it's protected, no paperwork needed. Registration with the Copyright Office is voluntary. Its main benefit: under the law, a registration certificate is treated as prima facie evidence of ownership, which shifts the burden of proof onto the other side in an infringement case. In short, you're protected either way, but registration makes your claim much easier to enforce.

How to register a song in India

  1. Go to the official Copyright Office portal at copyright.gov.in.
  2. File using Form XIV, with a fee of around ₹500 per work.
  3. Register each element separately where relevant — the lyrics, the composition, and the sound recording are different works.
  4. Expect roughly 60–90 days, which includes a mandatory 30-day objection window for anyone to contest the claim.

How long copyright lasts

For literary, musical, and lyrical works, copyright generally lasts the author's lifetime plus 60 years. For sound recordings, it's 60 years from the year of publication. In practice, your music is protected for far longer than your career.

Should you register?

For a casual single, automatic protection is usually enough. Consider registering when a song is commercially important, when multiple people contributed and you want ownership on record, or before a release you expect to be widely used. Either way, keep your dated project files and agreements — they're useful evidence too. When you distribute, your distributor also records your ownership metadata and ISRCs, which helps establish your claim.

Frequently asked questions

Is my song automatically copyrighted in India?

Yes. Under the Copyright Act, 1957, your original song is protected by copyright automatically the moment it's created in a fixed form — you don't need to register or pay for that protection to exist.

How many copyrights are in one song?

Up to three: the lyrics (a literary work), the composition (a musical work), and the sound recording. Each can be owned by a different person, which is why royalties can be split among writer, composer, and recording owner.

How do I register a song copyright in India?

File on the Copyright Office portal at copyright.gov.in using Form XIV, with a fee of about ₹500 per work. Register the lyrics, composition, and sound recording separately. It takes roughly 60–90 days, including a 30-day objection window.

Do I have to register my song to be protected?

No. Protection is automatic. Registration is voluntary, but it gives you a certificate that serves as prima facie evidence of ownership, which makes a copyright claim much easier to enforce.

How long does music copyright last in India?

For lyrics, composition, and musical works it generally lasts the author's lifetime plus 60 years. For sound recordings it lasts 60 years from the year of publication.

Does distributing my music protect my copyright?

Distribution itself doesn't register your copyright, but your distributor records ownership metadata and assigns ISRCs, which help establish and track your claim. For formal proof, register with the Copyright Office.

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.

LinkedIn →