It’s Official: Songs Need 1,000 Streams to Earn Royalties on Spotify

Editor’s Note

This article outlines Spotify’s new royalty policies designed to address streaming fraud and manage platform content. The changes aim to ensure that the company’s growing payouts—over $40 billion to date—more effectively reach legitimate artists and rights holders.

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New Royalty System Announced

Spotify officially announced a significant change to its royalty system on Tuesday, introducing several new policies aimed at combating streaming fraud and managing the vast volume of content on the platform.

“As Spotify payouts to the music industry continue to grow — over $40 billion and counting — we want to make sure that money is going to the people our platform is designed to enable: emerging and professional artists,” Spotify said.

The company identified three specific issues as having reached a “tipping point” and is collaborating with industry partners to introduce policies to: (1) further deter artificial streaming, (2) better distribute small payments that aren’t reaching artists, and (3) rein in those attempting to game the system with noise.

The 1,000-Stream Threshold

Most notably, starting early next year, Spotify will implement a payment threshold requiring songs to reach at least 1,000 streams before they can generate any royalties. According to Spotify data, of the 100 million songs on the platform, only about 37.5 million have more than 1,000 streams. This means over 60% of all tracks do not meet the threshold. However, these songs account for less than 1% of all streams on Spotify.

Industry Reaction and Criticism

The policy has alarmed many independent musicians concerned that their already small share of streaming revenue will shrink further. Some artists have criticized the move as redirecting earnings from smaller artists to larger, more popular ones.

“This will move an estimated $40-$46 million annually from artists like Damon & Naomi to artists like Ed Sheeran,” tweeted Damon Krukowski of the indie group Damon and Naomi. “Spotify will tell you it’s not about artists you know. Why would you believe them?”

This critique touches on broader industry debates about streaming services’ “pro-rata” payment model versus a potential “user-centric” model.

Spotify’s Justification and Aggregate Impact

Spotify argues that an individual stream is worth very little, and songs affected by the new threshold earn about 3 cents per month on average. Furthermore, many music distributors have minimum withdrawal amounts (e.g., $2 on DistroKid), making these tiny payments inaccessible to artists anyway.

While individually insignificant, Spotify states these small payments collectively amount to about $40 million annually. The company plans to redistribute this money to songs that meet the 1,000-stream threshold. Tracks that meet the threshold represent a minority on the platform but account for 99.5% of all streams.

Support from Industry Executives

Some industry executives have voiced support for the changes. Denis Ladegaillerie, founder and CEO of Believe (parent company of TuneCore), welcomed the initiative.

“Believe welcomes Spotify’s initiative to clean-up the market from artificial streaming and noise, driving more revenues to all legitimate artists,” Ladegaillerie said. “We believe that creating more benefits to develop up-and-coming artists would be a great complement to the institution of a 1,000 stream threshold.”
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⏰ Published on: November 21, 2023