YouTube Music vs YouTube: the key difference
Understanding the distinction between YouTube Music and YouTube is essential before distributing.
| Platform | What It Is | How Content Gets There |
|---|---|---|
| YouTube | Video platform | Direct upload to your channel |
| YouTube Music | Streaming service (like Spotify) | Distribution through aggregator |
YouTube is the video platform where you upload content directly to your channel. You control everything: the video, metadata, and monetization settings.
YouTube Music is Google's music streaming service, similar to Spotify or Apple Music. Your audio files and artwork get delivered by a distributor, and YouTube automatically generates "Art Tracks" that display your cover art while the audio plays.
Both platforms are connected. When someone listens to your distributed track on YouTube Music, it also counts as a play on the Art Track video on YouTube. This creates dual monetization potential.
Art Tracks can outperform some DSP streams depending on geography and listener mix. YouTube Music streams contribute directly to this rate, making distribution a strong complement to direct channel uploads. See current YouTube rates and compare them with Spotify before forecasting.
Source: Dynamoi first-party distribution data, 2025, aggregated and anonymized.
Note You can and should use both approaches. Distribute your music for YouTube Music availability while also uploading music videos directly to your channel for visual content and engagement.
What happens when you distribute
When you distribute music to YouTube Music through an aggregator, several things happen automatically:
YouTube creates an Art Track YouTube generates a video using your cover art and audio file. This Art Track appears on YouTube and becomes playable in YouTube Music.
A Topic Channel is created If you do not already have an Official Artist Channel, YouTube creates a "Topic" channel (e.g., "Your Artist Name - Topic") to host your Art Tracks.
Content ID registration (optional) If you opt into Content ID through your distributor, your track is fingerprinted. When others use your music in their videos, you can choose to monetize, track, or block that usage.
Music appears in YouTube Music catalog Your track becomes searchable and playable in the YouTube Music app and website, just like tracks from major labels.
Choosing a distributor
Most major distributors deliver to YouTube Music. The key considerations for AI music creators are Content ID policies and whether the distributor accepts AI-generated content.
DistroKid
According to DistroKid's YouTube documentation, music distributed through their service appears in YouTube Music and as Art Tracks on YouTube. They accept AI music with the standard conditions: you must own commercial rights and cannot impersonate other artists.
DistroKid offers YouTube Content ID as an add-on service. Consider carefully before enabling it, as Content ID can create conflicts if you also upload your own music directly to your channel.
TuneCore
TuneCore distributes to YouTube Music but has restrictions on 100% AI-generated content. If your tracks include significant human creative input, they are more likely to be accepted.
RouteNote
RouteNote delivers to YouTube Music through both free and premium tiers. Their policies are relatively AI-friendly, making them a viable option for testing whether your AI tracks gain traction.
| Distributor | YouTube Music Delivery | Content ID | AI Policy |
|---|---|---|---|
| DistroKid | Yes | Optional add-on | Allowed with conditions |
| TuneCore | Yes | Included | Restricted for 100% AI |
| RouteNote | Yes | Optional | Generally allowed |
Content ID: understand before you opt in
Content ID is YouTube's system for identifying copyrighted content. When enabled, YouTube scans all uploaded videos against a database of registered works. If your music appears in someone else's video, you can monetize that usage.
For AI music creators, Content ID presents both opportunities and risks:
Benefits:
- Monetize when others use your music in their videos
- Track where your music appears across YouTube
- Build additional revenue streams
Risks:
- May trigger claims on your own uploads if not properly configured
- Requires coordination with your direct YouTube uploads
- AI tracks may have issues if they share patterns with other registered content
Warning If you plan to upload your own music videos directly to YouTube, coordinate with your distributor to whitelist your channel before enabling Content ID. Otherwise, you may receive claims on your own content.
Preparing your release for YouTube Music
YouTube Music has similar technical requirements to other streaming platforms.
Audio specifications
- Format: WAV or FLAC (lossless)
- Sample rate: 44.1kHz or higher
- Bit depth: 16-bit or 24-bit
- Loudness: Target around -14 LUFS for consistency
Artwork requirements
- Dimensions: 3000 x 3000 pixels minimum
- Format: JPEG or PNG
- Content: Square image, no text clutter, no misleading content
Metadata
- Artist name: Consistent with your other releases
- Track title: Clear and accurate
- Genre: Select appropriate primary genre
- Release date: Set in advance for pre-save campaigns
- AI disclosure: Toggle if your distributor provides this option
The distribution process
Upload to your distributor Log into your distributor dashboard and create a new release. Upload your audio file, cover art, and complete all metadata fields. Select YouTube Music as a delivery destination.
Decide on Content ID If your distributor offers Content ID, decide whether to enable it. For AI creators who also upload videos directly, consider leaving it disabled or ensuring your channel is whitelisted.
Submit and wait After submission, your distributor reviews the release and delivers it to YouTube. Processing typically takes 1-2 weeks before your track appears live.
Verify your release Once live, search for your track in YouTube Music. Check that the Art Track displays correctly on YouTube with proper artwork and metadata.
Claiming an Official Artist Channel
Once your music is live on YouTube Music, you can upgrade to an Official Artist Channel (OAC). This merges your Topic Channel releases with your personal YouTube channel uploads into a single verified presence.
Why claim an OAC
- Unified presence: All your content appears under one channel
- Verification badge: Shows you are the official artist
- Better analytics: Access YouTube's artist-specific analytics tools
- Subscriber merge: Subscribers from your Topic Channel transfer to your OAC
Requirements for OAC
According to DistroKid's OAC guide, you need:
- At least one distributed release live on YouTube Music
- A YouTube channel with your artist name
- At least one uploaded video (Shorts do not count)
- Matching artist name between your channel and distributed releases
How to claim
Through DistroKid, access Features > Special Access > YouTube Official Artist Channel. Submit your request and wait up to 6 weeks for processing.
Note OAC claims are permanent and cannot be undone or transferred. Make sure you are ready to commit your artist project to that channel before applying.
YouTube AI disclosure requirements
YouTube requires disclosure of AI-generated content in certain situations. As of 2025, AI-labeled content must be disclosed when it could affect viewer trust or when it depicts realistic scenarios that did not actually occur.
For AI music specifically:
- Instrumental AI music generally does not require special disclosure beyond distributor metadata
- AI-generated vocals may require disclosure, especially if they could be mistaken for a real person
- AI art used in visualizers should be disclosed through YouTube Studio's AI label options
Staying transparent helps build trust and reduces risk of content being flagged or removed.
Combining distribution with direct uploads
The most effective strategy uses both distribution and direct uploads together:
| Approach | Best For |
|---|---|
| Distribution to YouTube Music | Getting in the streaming catalog, Art Tracks, potential playlist inclusion |
| Direct video uploads | Music videos, visualizers, engaging content, building subscribers |
Workflow recommendation:
- Distribute your track to YouTube Music for catalog presence
- Create a music video or visualizer for the same track
- Upload the video directly to your YouTube channel
- Link the video to your Art Track through your OAC
This gives you streaming presence plus engaging video content, maximizing your reach on both YouTube Music and the main YouTube platform.
Timeline expectations
| Stage | Typical Duration |
|---|---|
| Distributor processing | 1-3 business days |
| YouTube ingestion | 3-14 days |
| OAC claim (if applicable) | 2-6 weeks |
| Content ID activation | 1-2 weeks after distribution |
Plan releases at least 2-3 weeks in advance. If you need a specific release date, set it as a future date in your distributor to ensure everything is live on time.
Best practices for AI music on YouTube Music
Start with direct YouTube uploads: Build a channel presence with video content before distributing. This makes OAC claims smoother and gives you an audience ready for your distributed releases.
Be strategic with Content ID: Only enable it if you understand the implications. For many AI creators, skipping Content ID avoids complexity while you are building your catalog.
Use both platforms together: Distribution gets you in the streaming catalog; direct uploads give you visual content and engagement. Use both.
Maintain consistent branding: Use the same artist name across your YouTube channel and distributed releases. Inconsistent naming creates fragmented presence and prevents OAC merging.
Monitor for issues: Check your Topic Channel and Art Tracks periodically. If content disappears or metadata is wrong, work with your distributor to correct it.
YouTube Music distribution is one piece of a broader YouTube strategy. The real advantage for AI creators is combining distributed music with original video content, building a channel that monetizes through both streaming and ad revenue.