CD Baby does not accept any AI-generated content. Their support page (updated October 29, 2025) states: "At this time you will not be able to distribute A.I.-generated content." This applies even if you have commercial rights from your AI generator. Having a Suno Pro or Udio subscription does not change CD Baby's position.
Why does CD Baby ban AI music?
CD Baby's ban reflects three concerns. First, copyright uncertainty: fully AI-generated works cannot be copyrighted in the US under the human authorship requirement affirmed in Thaler v. Perlmutter. CD Baby cannot protect or collect royalties for content without a clear legal human author. Second, rights compliance: AI generators may have been trained on copyrighted material, creating potential infringement issues that CD Baby cannot independently verify. Third, platform partner requirements: streaming platforms are tightening their own AI policies, and CD Baby has chosen to avoid the risk entirely.
What happens if you upload AI music to CD Baby?
CD Baby outlines three consequences for AI content violations:
- The track will be removed from all streaming platforms
- The account may be terminated
- Unpaid earnings may be held
Warning CD Baby actively identifies AI content. Attempting to upload AI music without disclosure risks losing your entire catalog and account access.
These penalties apply whether AI content is flagged during initial review or discovered after distribution. CD Baby's enforcement is retroactive: previously distributed tracks can be pulled if later identified as AI-generated.
Is AI-assisted music different from AI-generated at CD Baby?
CD Baby's policy is stricter than TuneCore's on this distinction. TuneCore rejects "100% AI-generated" works but allows AI that "enhances human creation." CD Baby's ban covers AI-generated content broadly. The only AI-adjacent content CD Baby accepts is music processed by AI production tools (mastering, mixing, stem separation) where the original composition and performance are entirely human-created. AI as a production tool is different from AI as a content generator.
What are the alternatives for AI music creators?
If you need to distribute AI-generated music, these distributors accept it with conditions:
| Distributor | AI policy | Key condition |
|---|---|---|
| DistroKid | Accepts | No impersonation, no mass spam |
| RouteNote | Accepts | Must provide AI tool links |
| LANDR | Accepts | Disclosure required, 12 songs/month cap |
| Amuse | Accepts | Meta and YouTube CID excluded |
| UnitedMasters | Accepts | No explicit limitations stated |
DistroKid offers the fewest restrictions for AI content. RouteNote provides a free tier (15% revenue share) for creators testing AI distribution without upfront cost.
Should you avoid CD Baby entirely?
For AI music, yes. CD Baby is not the right distributor, regardless of your content quality or commercial licensing status. For traditional musicians who use AI tools only in post-production (mastering, mixing), CD Baby remains a viable option. Their one-time fee model can be more economical than subscriptions for artists with lower release volumes. The distinction is clear: CD Baby bans AI as a content generator but accepts AI as a production tool.
