Skip to main content

Apple Music will pay music owners a slightly higher percentage than Spotify

After a supposed “leaked contract” suggested otherwise, Apple has confirmed that Apple Music will pay music rights holders a slightly higher proportion of the service’s subscription revenue than its streaming music competitor, Spotify. Apple’s streaming service, which launches on June 30, will pay music owners 71.5 percent of its subscription revenue. Spotify, in comparison, pays music rights holders 70 percent of its subscription revenue. Both services, which cost subscribers $10 per month, also offer free options which pay music owners a much lower fee per stream. Notably though, Apple will not pay rights holders anything during the service’s three-month free trial period.

Apple exec Robert Kondrk confirmed the 71.5 percent rate to Recode today after Digital Music News wrongly reported that the service would pay rights holders just 58 percent of its subscription income. Kondrk suggests Apple’s slightly higher payouts are in place, in part, to compensate for its lengthy free trial period. The percentage of Apple’s payouts outside of the U.S. will be slightly higher still, averaging “around 73 percent.” The report also notes that music execs at labels with which Apple is working have confirmed the figures.

Recommended Videos

While both Apple Music and Spotify claim roughly the same percentage payout to rights holders, Apple hopes that it will have a larger subscription base — and therefore pay more to artists in the long run than Spotify. It will certainly be an uphill battle for Apple, though, as Spotify currently has 75 million users including 20 million paid subscribers.

Spotify has received much backlash from its free, ad-supported, on-demand service, but the streaming music service’s spokesman, Jonathan Prince, notes that Apple will offer free music as well through iTunes Radio and Beats 1 radio. “We pay royalties on every single listen, including trial offers and our mobile free custom radio service, and that adds up to approximately 70 percent of our total revenues, as it always has,” said Prince to Recode.

The payout percentages will only matter, though, if Apple Music successfully attracts subscribers en masse — and that’s a big if. The tech giant hopes that its brand recognition — and 800 million current iTunes accounts — will be enough to draw subscription numbers bigger than Spotify. Time will tell if that scenario plays out, and we’ll know a little better when the service launches at the end of this month.

Chris Leo Palermino
Chris Leo Palermino is a music, tech, business, and culture journalist based between New York and Boston. He also contributes…
You can now design custom Spotify playlist cover art, right in the app
Spotify's Cover Art Creator tool seen on a phone screen.

Personalizing your Spotify playlist by uploading your own covert art image is a great way to put a visual stamp on your audio mix, but now, you can design that cover art right in the app.  Starting today as a beta feature in English in 65 markets, the "Create Cover Art" feature gives users the ability to pick backgrounds, create text effects, and add stickers to generate an original piece of cover art for their playlists. It's available to both free and Spotify Premium users.

Accessing the new feature is as simple as opening a playlist you've created, selecting the context menu (the three dots ... ) and choosing Create Cover Art. You'll then be given the choice to change the cover image (by uploading) or to create covert art.

Read more
Concert overload? Apple Music’s new feature can help you choose
The Apple Music screen on the Apple iPhone 16 Plus.

It's a good time to have ears because there's a lot of amazing music coming out all the time. Chappell Roan and Sabrina Carpenter are churning out catchy earworms left and right. Old favorites like Linkin Park and Breaking Benjamin are making comebacks. If you've already had to choose between concerts this year, it was probably a tough choice — but Apple Music is introducing a new feature that might help you make your decision.

Apple Music will soon have a tool that musicians can use to create specific playlists based on the setlists of their current shows. If several concerts are happening at the same time, you'll be able to look at the setlist and see what songs are being performed. If one artist is playing your favorite album and the other isn't, well, it's an easy choice.

Read more
What is Deezer? Features, pricing, and music quality explained
Deezer app on an iPhone 15 Pro.

While Spotify and Apple Music may be the giants of the music streaming services, Deezer is perhaps a lesser-known streaming music platform that is nonetheless an excellent alternative. With access to more than 120 million songs, Deezer stands out by prioritizing premium sound quality through its HiFi plan that offers FLAC tracks that stream at CD quality, which is better than even Spotify offers (at the moment).

Additionally, Deezer’s personalized Flow recommendations teach your music taste to curate the perfect playlist for you. No more endless scrolling to find that ideal vibe. Give those earbuds the sound quality they deserve. Read more about Deezer below.
What is Deezer?

Read more