What Is the Short Answer?
Spotify itself charges nothing. The cost comes from distributors who deliver your music to the platform. Prices range from $0 (with a royalty commission) to $60/year (for premium subscriptions).
How Do 2026 Distributor Prices Compare?
| Distributor | Cost | Royalty Commission | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| DistroKid | $24.99/year | 0% | Prolific releasers |
| TuneCore Rising | $24.99/year | 0% (20% on social) | New artists |
| TuneCore Breakout | $44.99/year | 0% (20% on social) | Growing artists |
| Ditto Music | $14/year | 0% | Budget-conscious |
| CD Baby | $9.99/single | 9% | Occasional releases |
| RouteNote Free | $0 | 15% | Testing the waters |
| UnitedMasters DEBUT+ | $19.99/year | 0% | Value seekers |
| UnitedMasters SELECT | $59.99/year | 0% | Artists seeking brand deals |
How Each Pricing Model Works
How quickly do you earn back the subscription?
Based on Dynamoi's royalty data, Spotify pays $3.02 per 1,000 streams. At that rate, a single on DistroKid needs roughly 8,300 Spotify streams to cover the $24.99 annual fee. For TuneCore's Rising plan ($24.99), the math is identical. If your music is also earning on Amazon Music ($9.02/1K), YouTube ($5.28/1K), and other platforms, the break-even comes even faster.
Annual subscription ($14-60/year). You pay once per year for unlimited uploads and keep 100% of your streaming royalties. DistroKid, TuneCore, Ditto, and UnitedMasters use this model. The cost is fixed regardless of how many songs you release or how much you earn.
One-time fee + commission ($9.99/single). CD Baby charges per release rather than per year, plus takes 9% of royalties. Your music stays up forever with no renewal fees. This works well for artists releasing infrequently who want a "set it and forget it" approach.
Free with commission ($0 upfront). RouteNote's free tier takes 15% of your royalties in exchange for zero upfront cost. You only pay if you earn. This is genuine distribution to Spotify, Apple Music, and other major platforms, not a limited trial.
Tip If you expect to earn more than $167/year in royalties, a paid subscription will cost you less than RouteNote's 15% commission. Below that threshold, free distribution actually saves money.
What Hidden Costs Should You Watch For?
The headline price rarely tells the full story.
Add-on features. DistroKid charges extra for YouTube Content ID ($4.95/release/year), Shazam registration ($0.99/song/year), and keeping music up after cancellation ($29/single). A prolific artist using all features might pay $50-100/year despite the $24.99 base price.
Social platform commissions. TuneCore keeps 20% of royalties from TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook even on paid plans. This commission applies to revenue from user-generated content using your tracks.
Renewal fees. CD Baby's "one-time" fee truly is one-time for distribution. But their Pro Publishing add-on ($39.99/release) requires ongoing payments to maintain publishing administration.
Upgrade pressure. Free tiers on some platforms limit features like release speed, support priority, or analytics depth. Budget for the paid tier if you need professional-grade service.
Which Option for Which Artist?
Just starting out, uncertain about earnings? RouteNote Free lets you test with zero risk. You only pay if you earn, and the 15% cut is reasonable for an artist discovering whether their music has an audience.
Releasing one or two singles per year? CD Baby's $9.99 per single makes sense when you're not releasing frequently enough to justify an annual subscription. The 9% commission is manageable at lower volume.
Releasing regularly, earning $200+/year? Subscription services like DistroKid ($24.99) or Ditto ($14) become clearly cheaper than commission-based alternatives once you cross the break-even point.
Managing multiple artists or a label? DistroKid's label plans start at $89.99/year for up to five artists. UnitedMasters and TuneCore offer similar multi-artist tiers. Compare the per-artist cost against individual subscriptions.
Does Spotify Charge Artists Anything?
Worth repeating: Spotify does not charge artists or distributors to host music. The platform takes its cut (roughly 30%) from listener subscriptions and advertising revenue, then pays the remainder to rights holders.
Every dollar you pay goes to your distributor for the service of delivering your music, providing analytics, and handling royalty accounting. Spotify never sees a cent of your distribution fees.
What Is the Bottom Line?
For most active artists, $20-25/year gets unlimited distribution to Spotify and 50+ other platforms with 100% royalty retention. That's the real answer: less than the cost of a single month of Spotify Premium gets your music in front of its entire listener base for a full year.
Free options exist for artists with zero budget, but the commission structures mean you'll pay more in the long run if your music generates any meaningful revenue. Calculate the break-even point before committing to a "free" service.
