Key takeaways
- Mechanical licensing applies to the song composition (lyrics and melody) and is required whenever a track is reproduced or distributed across formats like streaming, downloads, physical releases, or cover recordings.
- The need for a mechanical license is driven by how a song is used, not just who owns it. If you are distributing a composition you do not fully control, such as a cover or a co-written track, licensing is required.
- Mechanical royalties operate separately from master royalties, which means a single stream can generate two different income streams, one for the recording and one for the composition, processed through different systems.
- Streaming platforms manage licensing at scale, but royalty collection depends on accurate song registration and metadata. Missing or incorrect data can result in delayed or unclaimed earnings.
- Mechanical royalty rates vary by format. Physical formats and downloads follow statutory rates of 13.1 cents per song or 2.52 cents per minute, while streaming uses a revenue-based calculation model, not a fixed per-stream payout.
- To capture full earnings, artists need more than distribution. A complete setup includes distribution, publishing registration, and proper licensing, especially when working with covers or shared compositions.
Mechanical licensing in music is the legal permission required to reproduce and distribute a copyrighted song, including its lyrics and melody, across formats such as streaming, downloads, CDs, vinyl, and cover recordings. It applies to the composition (not the master recording) and involves songwriters, publishers, distributors, digital platforms, and organizations like the Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC).
In the U.S., Section 115 of the copyright law provides a compulsory mechanical license for eligible musical works, allowing reproduction once a song is publicly released. The Music Modernization Act (2018) introduced a blanket licensing system for streaming and download platforms. It established the Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC) to collect and distribute digital mechanical royalties to songwriters and publishers.
Who needs a mechanical license?
You need a mechanical license when you reproduce or distribute a song you did not fully write or control. The key trigger is not only ownership, but usage.
A mechanical license is required in situations like:
- Recording and releasing a cover version of an existing song
- Manufacturing physical formats (CDs, vinyl) that include third-party compositions
- Distributing music where publishing rights are split or partially owned
- Monetizing songs that include co-writers or external publishers
- Using compositions in download-based or ownership-based formats (not just streaming access)
You usually do not need a mechanical license if:
- You own 100% of the composition rights
- The song is in the public domain in your release territory
- The platform or service uses a blanket licensing system for that use
- Your publisher or administrator is handling licensing and collection
- The track is a private demo and is not being distributed or monetized
How mechanical licensing works?
Mechanical licensing works by matching the use of a song composition with the songwriter, publisher, or rights administrator who owns that composition. It applies whenever a song is copied or delivered to listeners, whether through streaming, downloads, physical formats, or cover releases.
For artists, the process changes by release type. A cover song usually needs a mechanical license before release. On the other hand, an original song requires accurate registration so platforms and organizations like The MLC can match usage data to the correct rights holders.
The basic flow looks like this:
- Write the composition: The composition is the song itself, which includes lyrics, melody, and musical structure. The songwriter, publisher, or publishing administrator controls these rights, even if someone else later records the song.
- Produce the master recording: The recording is the master version of the song. The artist, label, or master owner controls this recording, but that does not automatically include the composition rights.
- Prepare the song for release: Before distribution, the release details should be checked, like song title, songwriter credits, publisher details, ISRC, release version, and whether the track is original or a cover. Clean metadata helps royalties reach the right account.
- Distribute the song: Mechanical licensing is triggered when the composition is copied or delivered through formats like interactive streaming, downloads, CDs, vinyl, or cover song releases.
- Obtain mechanical licensing authorization: A mechanical license grants permission to reproduce and distribute the composition across approved formats and platforms.
- Match usage data to the composition: Streaming services and licensing systems report usage activity, such as streams and downloads. This data must be matched to the correct song, songwriter, publisher, and ownership shares.
- Claim mechanical royalties: Once usage data is successfully matched, mechanical royalties are paid to the songwriter, publisher, or publishing administrator. The recording owner may separately receive master royalties, but mechanical royalties belong to the composition side.
Mechanical royalties explained: where royalties come from, and who gets paid?
Mechanical royalties are generated from:
- Interactive streaming: On-demand plays on platforms like Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube Music, and monetized streams on SoundCloud.
- Digital downloads: Permanent purchases from online music stores
- Physical sales: CDs, vinyl, and other manufactured copies
- Cover songs: New recordings of songs written by someone else
- Ringtones: Paid digital copies sold for mobile use
Mechanical royalties track the use of the song itself, while master royalties track the use of the recording. Both can be triggered by the same listener action, but flow through separate systems.
Usage type | What triggers the royalty | Who usually pays | Who gets paid |
CD or vinyl | A physical copy is manufactured and distributed | Label, artist, or manufacturer | Songwriter and publisher |
Cover song | A new recording of an existing composition is distributed | Cover artist, label, or distributor | Original songwriter and publisher |
Interactive streaming | A listener chooses a song on demand | Digital music provider or licensing system | Songwriter and publisher |
Permanent download | A listener buys a digital copy | Store, label, distributor, or licensee | Songwriter and publisher |
Ringtone | A song is sold as a ringtone | Licensee or platform | Songwriter and publisher |
How to get a mechanical license?
A mechanical license is obtained through a licensing service, publisher, distributor workflow, or rights administrator, depending on how and where the music is being released. For cover songs in the U.S., services like Songfile (by the Harry Fox Agency) handle licensing for formats like streams, downloads, CDs, and ringtones. The process is straightforward but requires accurate rights and release details.
Steps to get a mechanical license:
- Confirm the song is eligible: the song must already be publicly released by the original copyright owner. Mechanical licenses do not apply to unreleased works.
- Identify the rights holder: find the songwriter, publisher, or publishing administrator who controls the composition. This ensures the license is issued correctly.
- Choose the licensing route: use a licensing service, contact the publisher directly, or use a distributor that supports cover licensing as part of its workflow. Some of these licensing services are:
- Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC) - U.S.
- Harry Fox Agency (HFA) - U.S.
- PRS for Music / MCPS - UK
- GEMA - Germany
- SACEM - France
- APRA AMCOS - Australia & New Zealand
- Estimate usage if required: some licenses require you to estimate the number of units, downloads, or expected streams to calculate the royalty owed upfront.
- Pay the licensing fee: for U.S. physical formats and permanent downloads, the statutory rate is 13.1 cents per song or 2.52 cents per minute, whichever is higher.
- Keep documentation and metadata aligned: store the license details, songwriter credits, and release metadata. This helps avoid disputes and ensures royalties are tracked and paid correctly.
What is mechanical licensing for cover songs?
A cover song needs a mechanical license when you record and release your own version of a song written by someone else. The license clears the composition, which is lyrics and melody, not the original master recording.
The Harry Fox Agency’s Songfile service supports cover song licensing for CDs, downloads, ringtones, and streams, while The MLC has distributed more than $3.5 billion since 2021.
A mechanical license for a cover song usually allows you to:
- Record your own version of an existing song
- Distribute the cover as an audio release
- Sell the cover as a download or physical copy
- Release it on eligible streaming platforms
- Pay the original songwriter and publisher through mechanical royalties
A mechanical license does not usually allow you to:
- Sample or reuse the original master recording
- Change the core lyrics or melody
- Create a derivative version without permission
- Use the song in a video without sync clearance
- Copy the original release artwork, branding, or visuals
How streaming platforms handle mechanical licensing?
Streaming platforms handle mechanical licensing at the platform level. For on-demand streaming in the U.S., digital services operate under a centralized licensing system, while artists still need to ensure their compositions are properly registered to receive payments.
The key difference: platforms handle the licensing infrastructure, but artists are responsible for correct ownership data and registration.
How it works:
- On-demand streams generate mechanical royalties: when a listener chooses a song on demand, it triggers a mechanical royalty tied to the composition.
- Streaming platforms use centralized licensing systems: instead of licensing each song individually, eligible platforms use a system administered by MLC to manage rights and payments at scale.
- Accurate song registration is essential: if your composition data is missing or incorrect, royalties may go unmatched or delayed, even if the track is generating streams.
- Master royalties and mechanical royalties flow separately: one stream can generate both, but they flow through different systems because they belong to different rights (recording vs. composition).
- Mechanical licensing rules differ worldwide: mechanical licensing rules vary by country, so international streams may be processed through different collection societies and timelines.
- Cover Songs must be properly identified: platforms and distributors often ask whether a track is a cover to ensure the correct licensing path is applied.
How SoundCloud artists collect mechanical royalties?
SoundCloud helps artists distribute recordings, monetize streams, and retain earnings, but mechanical royalties are still tied to composition ownership and publishing registration. Distribution covers the recording side; mechanical royalties come from the songwriting side.
SoundCloud’s Artist Pro combines distribution and monetization in one plan. It is priced at $99/year (about $8.25/month) and includes unlimited uploads, unlimited distribution to 50+ platforms (including Spotify, Apple Music, and TikTok), advanced insights, and 100% of distribution earnings retained by the artist.
To collect mechanical royalties with SoundCloud distribution:
- Distribute your master recording through SoundCloud. This gets your music onto 60+ major streaming platforms where mechanical royalties are generated.
- Register your compositions with the Mechanical Licensing Collective. It is
required for collecting U.S. digital mechanical royalties from streaming and downloads. - Register with a PRO like ASCAP or BMI. This ensures you also collect performance royalties tied to your compositions.
- Maintain accurate metadata across all releases. Consistent artist name, songwriter credits, ISRC, and track details ensure royalties are correctly matched and paid.
- Secure mechanical licenses for cover songs before release. Distribution does not automatically clear music publishing rights for covers.
How much do mechanical royalties pay?
Mechanical royalty rates are not fixed; they vary based on format, territory, and licensing rules. The clearest benchmark exists for physical formats and downloads, while streaming uses a revenue-based formula instead of a flat per-play rate.
In the U.S., statutory rates apply to physical formats and permanent downloads. For 2026, the rate is 13.1 cents per song or 2.52 cents per minute, whichever is higher. Streaming mechanical royalties are calculated using a formula set by the Copyright Royalty Board, so they cannot be estimated with a per-stream number.
How mechanical royalties are calculated by format:
- CDs and vinyl: Paid per unit manufactured or distributed using statutory rates
- Digital downloads: Paid per permanent purchase of a track
- Interactive streaming: Paid from a pooled system based on platform revenue, usage, and subscriber activity
- Cover songs: Licensed based on expected units, downloads, or streams, depending on the release format
- Ringtones: Treated separately under statutory rules, with different rate structures from standard downloads
Final thoughts
Mechanical licensing ensures songwriters and publishers get paid whenever a composition is reproduced through streaming, downloads, physical releases, or cover songs. As digital music grows, understanding how mechanical rights work is essential for protecting revenue and avoiding licensing issues.
For artists and distributors, proper licensing, publishing registration, and accurate metadata all work together to keep royalties flowing correctly. A strong release setup helps maximize earnings while keeping music releases compliant across platforms.
Distribute your music worldwide with SoundCloud Artist Pro, keep more of your earnings, and unlock professional tools to build your fanbase and grow your streaming revenue.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a mechanical license in music?
A mechanical license is the legal permission required to reproduce and distribute a copyrighted song composition. It applies whenever a song is delivered to listeners as a copy, through streaming, downloads, CDs, vinyl, ringtones, or cover recordings.
Do I need a mechanical license for a cover song?
Yes, in most cases, you need a mechanical license to release a cover song because you are using a composition written by someone else. The license allows you to record and distribute your own version, but it does not give permission to use the original recording or modify the core structure of the song.
How much does a mechanical license cost?
In the U.S., mechanical licensing for physical formats and permanent downloads follows a statutory rate. For 2026, the rate is 13.1 cents per song or 2.52 cents per minute of playing time, whichever is higher.
Does Spotify pay mechanical royalties?
Yes, Spotify and other interactive streaming platforms generate mechanical royalties because users choose songs on demand. However, these payments are processed through licensing systems and organizations like the MLC, which distribute the composition-side earnings to songwriters and publishers.
Who collects mechanical royalties?
In the U.S., the MLC is responsible for collecting and distributing digital mechanical royalties from eligible streaming and download services. Outside the U.S., different organizations handle this process. Publishers, administrators, and local collection societies may also manage mechanical royalties depending on the format and territory.
Do independent artists earn mechanical royalties?
Yes, independent artists can earn mechanical royalties if they write or control compositions that are streamed, downloaded, or reproduced. However, earning them depends on a proper setup.
Do independent artists need a mechanical license?
Independent artists need a mechanical license when they release a composition they do not fully own, such as a cover song or shared publishing track. If they own 100% of the composition, a license is not required, but proper registration is still needed to collect royalties.













