Key takeaways
- Switching distributors does not erase streams, but wrong ISRC or mismatched metadata do.
- Never remove music from the current distributor before the new version is confirmed live on every platform.
- ISRCs belong to the recording, not the distributor; they transfer with you.
- Royalties already earned at your old distributor are still paid out after you switch.
- YouTube Content ID registrations do not follow the ISRC; they require explicit action at both the old and new distributors.
- The best window to switch is between release cycles, never during an active campaign or while a track is gaining algorithmic traction.
To switch music distributors without losing streams: export your ISRC, upload your releases to the new distributor with exactly matching metadata, confirm every release is live on each platform, then remove from the old distributor. The sequence matters; removing before the new version is live creates a gap where your music is unavailable, and stream counts may reset.
Many artists switch distributors to reduce long-term costs, access better analytics, unlock monetization tools, or move to platforms with stronger audience-building features. However, mistakes like changing metadata, removing music too early, or switching during an active release campaign can cause duplicate tracks, lost playlist placements, or temporary downtime. Following the correct transfer process helps preserve your streams, royalties, and release history across Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, and other platforms.
Why do artists switch music distributors?
Most artists switch distributors when the real annual cost stops matching the headline price. Others switch because they've outgrown what their current platform offers. Basic delivery was enough early on, but now they need analytics, royalty splitting, or direct fan monetization that their distributor locks behind higher tiers or doesn't offer at all.
Reasons why artists switch distributors are:
- Cost adds up faster than expected: Annual renewal fees per release, YouTube Content ID charges per track, and royalty cuts compound as catalogs and streaming income grow. The platform that made sense at two releases a year rarely makes sense at ten.
- Add-ons that should be standard aren't: Release scheduling, split pay, and Content ID are included in some plans and charged separately in others. Artists pay for these features individually before realizing that a different platform bundles them at a lower total cost.
- Royalty cuts become expensive at scale: A 9% cut or 15% free-tier commission is negligible at zero streams. At $500/month in streaming income, those cuts cost more annually than most flat subscription plans.
- Basic distribution isn't enough anymore: Traditional distributors deliver files to platforms and stop there. Artists focused on audience growth increasingly want community tools, direct fan monetization, and analytics alongside distribution, features that most legacy distributors don't offer.
- Music going offline is a real risk: Subscription-based distributors remove releases if the annual fee lapses. Artists who don't notice a failed payment can lose months of algorithmic momentum before the issue is resolved.
Can you switch music distributors without losing streams?
Yes. Stream counts, playlist placements, and saves can usually be preserved if the transfer is handled correctly.
What you must keep the same
- Same ISRC
- Identical metadata (track title, artist name, version formatting, etc.)
- Same audio file/version of the recording
Why ISRC matters
- ISRC (International Standard Recording Code) is the unique identifier tied to a recording
- Platforms use it to recognize an existing track during a distributor switch
- Matching ISRC + metadata helps platforms map the new upload to the existing song entry
What happens if details do not match
- Streaming platforms create a completely new track entry.
- New Spotify and Apple Music listings are generated.
- Existing stream counts reset to zero.
- Playlist history and algorithmic data can be lost.
Temporary downtime is normal
- Music may briefly disappear during the transfer process.
- This usually lasts from a few hours to a few days.
- Temporary unavailability does not mean streams are lost.
Rules you must follow before switching music distributors
Rule 1: Never remove music from your current distributor first
Once you submit a takedown, platforms begin removing the release within 24 to 72 hours. If your new distribution is not yet live, the track goes dark with no replacement in place. Always upload to the new distributor, confirm releases are live, then remove from the old one.
Rule 2: ISRC Must Match Exactly
Log in to your current distributor and export ISRC for every track before starting. These codes must be entered manually at your new distributor during upload. Any discrepancy, even a formatting difference, risks duplicate entries on streaming platforms.
Rule 3: Metadata must match character for character
Track titles, artist name formatting, featuring credits, and the original release date must all match what your current distributor delivered. Check what was actually delivered in your current dashboard, not what you originally submitted, as some distributors auto-format fields. A track titled "My Song (feat. Artist)" re-uploaded as "My Song (Feat. Artist)" may create a duplicate entry.
Rule 4: Handle YouTube Content ID before removing anything
If your current distributor has registered your tracks for Content ID, those registrations are tied to their system. When you remove releases, the registrations deactivate. Your tracks become unclaimed on YouTube, and ad revenue during that gap may not be recoverable. Opt out of Content ID at the current distributor first, then re-register at the new one before completing the switch.
Rule 5: Do not switch during an active release campaign
If a track is gaining algorithmic traction on Spotify or Apple Music, pulling and re-uploading interrupts the signals driving that growth. The gap period resets those signals. Wait for the release cycle to complete before migrating that release.
Step-by-Step Process to Switch Music Distributors
Step 1: Build your migration spreadsheet
Create a spreadsheet with every release: title, track list, ISRC per track, UPCs, current platform list, original release date, and YouTube Content ID status. This is your working document throughout the migration. Do not start until it is complete.
Step 2: Choose your new distributor
Pick your new distributor while your catalog is fully live at the current one. Verify that it accepts custom ISRC, covers every platform your music is currently on, and that its pricing improves your actual annual cost once all add-ons are factored in. Confirm YouTube Content ID coverage is included in the base plan or an add-on.
Step 3: Opt out of YouTube Content ID at your current distributor
Opting out first clears the path for the new registration. There will be a short gap where tracks are unclaimed on YouTube, unavoidably, but keep it as short as possible.
Do this before uploading anything to the new distributor. Content ID cannot be registered by two distributors simultaneously.
Step 4:Upload to your new distributor with matching metadata
Use the exact metadata from your spreadsheet, same track titles, artist name formatting, featuring credits, original release date, and ISRC. Schedule releases at least four weeks in advance to open the editorial playlist pitching window and allow store ingestion time.
Step 5: Confirm new releases are live before removing from the old distributor
Check each platform individually: Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, TikTok, YouTube Music. Do not rely on your new distributor's dashboard alone. Once every release is confirmed live, submit takedowns at the current distributor. Platforms typically process takedowns within 24 to 72 hours.
Step 6: Register for YouTube Content ID at the new distributor
Once the new releases are confirmed live, register for Content ID at the new distributor. If Content ID is included in the plan, this is typically handled during or shortly after the upload process.
Step 7: Audit all links and update them
Test every platform URL, update smart links and link-in-bio tools, and check any press or promotional materials. If ISRC and metadata match, most platform URLs will be preserved. Run the audit, regardless of whether it takes under an hour, and catch problems before your audience encounters them.
Step 8: Keep the old distributor account open until royalties clear
Streaming platforms take 30 to 45 days to report earnings. Two to three months of royalties may still be in the pipeline at your old distributor after you switch. Keep the account accessible until the pending payment has cleared.
Common mistakes artists make when switching
Every mistake below is avoidable. Everyone has cost artists streams, royalties, or playlist placements that are difficult to recover.
- Removing releases before the new distributor is live. Tracks go dark for days or weeks while the new version is processed. Always confirm live before removing.
- Skipping the Content ID transfer: Content ID registrations do not follow the ISRC. They require explicit action at both the old and the new distributor. Artists who skip this step lose YouTube ad revenue during the gap and may need to re-register retroactively.
- Mismatching metadata on re-upload: A difference as small as a capital letter in a feature credit can cause platforms to create a duplicate entry. Check what was delivered at the current distributor, not your original submission, and copy it exactly.
- Closing the old account before royalties clear: On a net 60 schedule, two to three months of royalties may still be outstanding after switching. Closing the account early forfeits that money. Keep it open until the final payment has been processed.
- Switching during algorithmic traction: Pulling a track that is gaining momentum on Spotify's Discover Weekly or Apple Music's algorithms resets the signals. When it returns, it rebuilds from zero. Always wait for the cycle to complete.
- Migrating everything at once: Moving a large catalog simultaneously increases the exposure window if something goes wrong. Work in batches, active releases first, older catalog second. Confirm each batch is live before continuing.
How long does it take to switch distributors?
Done correctly, a full distributor migration takes four to eight weeks from first upload to completion.
Platform ingestion times by distributor:
- DistroKid: 24 to 72 hours to Spotify and Apple Music, fastest on the market
- SoundCloud: 2 to 5 days
- CD Baby: 1 to 2 weeks
- TuneCore: 1 to 2 weeks
- RouteNote: 2 to 3 weeks, the slowest option for time-sensitive migrations
YouTube Content ID processing adds one to two weeks on top of platform ingestion, regardless of which distributor handles it.
For large catalogs, work in batches of 10 releases, confirming each batch is live before starting the next. A 30-release catalog migrated this way takes six to eight weeks from start to finish.
Should you switch to a low-cost music distributor?
Run the real annual cost calculation first. Take your current total spend: subscription fee, plus Content ID add-ons per track per year, plus any catalog permanence fees, plus any royalty cut on your monthly streaming income. Then compare that number against a flat all-inclusive plan.
Platform | Annual cost | Royalties | Platforms | Does music stay live if you cancel? |
CD Baby | $9.99/single (one-time) + 9% cut | 91% | 150+ | Yes, one-time fee, permanent |
Ditto Music | From $19/year | 100% | 160+ | Yes, Pro and Label plans |
DistroKid | $24.99/year | 100% | 150+ | No, removed unless Leave a Legacy paid per release ($29/single) |
SoundCloud | $99/year | 100% | 60+ | Yes, permanent, no per-release renewal |
TuneCore | $24.99/single/year | 100% | 150+ | Yes, annual renewal is required per release |
What happens to your royalties when you switch?
Royalties already earned do not disappear when you switch distributors. Your old distributor continues to pay out royalties for streams that occurred during their tenure, even after your releases have been removed.
What happens after you switch:
- Your old distributor still receives delayed royalty reports for past streams.
- Streaming platforms usually report earnings 30-45 days later.
- It can take 2–3 months for all pending royalties to appear.
- March streams may only show up in your dashboard in May or June.
- Any unpaid balance remains accessible through your old distributor account.
- Future royalties after the switch will go to your new distributor once the migrated release is live.
- Using the same ISRC helps preserve stream history and tracking during the move.
Going forward, any streams occurring after your new distributor's releases go live will be paid through your new distributor on its regular schedule.
Why choose SoundCloud as your music distribution platform?
SoundCloud combines music distribution, audience growth, and monetization in one platform, making it a strong choice for independent artists. Beyond delivering music to streaming services, it also helps artists build direct fan relationships and generate income beyond streams.
Key advantages
- Distribution to 60+ platforms, including Spotify, Apple Music, and TikTok.
- 100% royalty retention on Artist Pro plans.
- Fan-Powered Royalties based on actual listener engagement.
- Built-in audience interaction through comments, reposts, and fan engagement.
- Unlimited uploads and fast release delivery.
- Monetization tools for streams, fan support, and creator growth.
- One dashboard for distribution, analytics, promotion, and audience management.
SoundCloud’s Fan-Powered Royalties model pays artists based on actual listener engagement instead of pooled platform-wide streams. For artists with loyal audiences, this can lead to higher per-stream earnings than traditional pro-rata payout systems.
SoundCloud also offers a Move Your Music tool, making it easier to migrate existing releases without manual re-uploads.
Final checklist before switching distributors
Before you start
- Build a spreadsheet of every release title, ISRC, UPC, platforms, release date, and Content ID status.
- Export all ISRCs from the current distributor.
- Choose a new distributor and confirm it accepts custom ISRC.
- Confirm the new distributor covers all platforms your music is currently on.
- Confirm YouTube Content ID coverage included in the plan or an add-on.
- Check for active release campaigns or tracks gaining algorithmic traction; do not switch these yet.
- Note outstanding royalties still to be cleared at the current distributor.
During migration
- Opt out of YouTube Content ID at the current distributor before uploading anywhere else.
- Upload all releases to the new distributor with metadata matching the current distributor exactly.
- Schedule new deliveries at least four weeks in advance.
- Confirm each release is live at the new distributor on every platform before removing it from the current distributor.
- Never have two versions of the same release live on the same platform simultaneously.
- Register for YouTube Content ID at the new distributor once the releases are confirmed live.
After migration
- Run a full platform URL audit test on every link.
- Update smart links and link-in-bio tools.
- Update any press or promotional materials with old platform URLs.
- Keep the old distributor account open until all pending royalties have cleared.
- If using publishing administration at the old distributor, confirm all publishing royalties have cleared, too.
- Only then, close the old distributor account.
Final thoughts
Switching music distributors is usually simple when handled carefully. Most problems, like lost streams, missing royalties, or broken playlist placements, happen when artists rush the process, remove releases too early, skip Content ID transfers, or close accounts before final payments arrive.
Before switching, map out each step clearly and compare the real yearly cost of your current distributor, including subscriptions, Content ID fees, permanence fees, and royalty cuts. For many growing artists, flat-fee plans with unlimited releases and 100% royalty retention can be more cost-effective in the long run.
Ready to switch distributors and take full control of your music career? Upgrade to SoundCloud Artist Pro and unlock unlimited distribution, 100% royalties, and powerful tools designed to help independent artists grow faster in 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do you need to remove your music before switching?
No. Upload to the new distributor first, confirm the new versions are live on every platform, then remove from the old distributor. Removing first leaves your music unavailable during the gap period and risks stream count resets.
Will I lose streams if I switch music distributors?
No, not if you use the same ISRC with exactly matching metadata at the new distributor. Most platforms will map the new delivery to the existing track, preserving stream counts and release history. There will be a brief unavailability window of a few hours to a few days during the switch. This is expected and temporary.
Can I switch distributors for free?
There is no fee to remove music from one distributor or upload to another. The cost comes from signing up with your new distributor. RouteNote has a free tier with no upfront cost (15% royalty cut). SoundCloud's Artist plan starts at $39 per year. DistroKid starts at $24.99 per year for unlimited releases.
How do I find my ISRC code?
Log in to your current distributor's dashboard and navigate to your release details. DistroKid shows ISRC under each release. TuneCore lists them in the release report. CD Baby shows them on the release details page. Export every code before starting any migration.
Can I change the distributor and artist name at the same time?
Not recommended. Changing your artist name at the same time as switching distributors doubles the risk of platforms creating duplicate entries. Streaming platforms link releases to artist profiles. A name change during a migration can result in releases appearing under a duplicate artist page. Change one at a time and confirm each is resolved before making the next change.
Which is the cheapest music distribution platform?
For zero upfront cost: RouteNote's free tier (15% royalty cut). For the lowest paid flat rate for unlimited releases: DistroKid at $24.99 per year. For unlimited distribution with YouTube Content ID included at no extra charge: SoundCloud Artist Pro at $99 per year is the lowest total annual cost for most active artists once add-ons are factored in.
How many times can I switch distributors?
There is no limit. Each switch requires the same process: ISRC export, metadata matching, new upload, confirm live, then remove from old. Switching frequently creates unnecessary risk of gaps and errors; most artists switch once and stay.
Will I lose playlist placements?
Algorithmic playlist placements are generally preserved if ISRC and metadata exactly match the original release. Editorial placements, such as Spotify curated playlists, are at the platform's discretion and can be affected by a distributor change. The ISRC match preserves the track's history and algorithmic signals; it does not guarantee editorial placements are maintained.
Can I switch distributors for just one release?
Yes. You can migrate specific releases while keeping others at your current distributor. Many artists migrate their active, revenue-generating catalog first and move older releases at a slower pace. There is no requirement to move everything at once.
Do I need to contact Spotify or Apple Music directly?
No. Distributors handle all communication with streaming platforms. If there is a metadata issue, a duplicate entry, or a mismatched profile, the new distributor's support team handles resolution with the platform. The exception is claiming a verified artist profile, which requires direct action through Spotify for Artists or Apple Music for Artists.
Which distributors let you keep 100% royalties?
SoundCloud, DistroKid, TuneCore, Ditto Music, and Amuse (paid plans) all offer 100% of distribution royalties to artists. CD Baby retains 9% of all earnings. RouteNote's free tier retains 15%. UnitedMasters' Debut+ plan retains 10%.













