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Publishing

Music Publishing Explained: The Complete Guide (2026)

Music publishing is the money your song earns as a composition, separate from your recording. Here's how publishing royalties work worldwide and how to collect them.

Abhiraj Singh
Abhiraj Singh
Founder & CEO · 2 June 2026 · 9 min read
Music Publishing Explained: The Complete Guide (2026)

Every song you release is actually two separate copyrights: the composition (the lyrics and melody you wrote) and the sound recording (the master you recorded and uploaded). Music publishing is the business of earning money from the composition. Most independent artists collect their recording royalties through a distributor but never collect their publishing royalties at all, which leaves real money sitting uncollected. This guide explains how publishing works and how to claim everything you are owed.

The two copyrights in every song

 CompositionSound recording
What it isThe song itself: lyrics + melodyThe specific recording (the master)
Who owns itThe songwriter(s) and their publisherThe artist or label that funded the recording
Who collects the moneyPROs, mechanical societies, a publishing administratorYour distributor

Your distributor only handles the recording side. The composition side is publishing, and it has its own separate collection system that you have to opt into yourself.

The four types of publishing royalty

The key thing to understand: every stream generates both a performance royalty and a mechanical royalty on the publishing side, on top of the recording royalty your distributor pays you.

Who's who in publishing

How to actually collect your publishing money

There are three practical steps, and you can do all of them as an independent artist:

The India picture

In India, compositions are administered by IPRS (the Indian Performing Right Society), which collects both the performance and mechanical share for songs on behalf of authors, composers, and publishers. Performers have a separate body (ISRA), and public performance of sound recordings is handled separately too. For the full Indian walkthrough, read how to collect your publishing royalties in India, and remember royalties are taxable — see tax on music royalties.

Start here

If you only do one thing today, register with your country's PRO so your performance royalties start accruing. Then read the cluster guides above. Publishing is the income stream most independent artists ignore, and it compounds over the entire life of your catalogue.

Frequently asked questions

What is music publishing in simple terms?

It's the business of earning money from the song you wrote (the composition), as opposed to the recording you released. It covers performance, mechanical, sync, and print royalties, and it is collected separately from your distributor's payments.

Is publishing different from my distributor royalties?

Yes. Your distributor pays you for the sound recording (the master). Publishing royalties come from the composition and are collected by PROs, mechanical societies, or a publishing administrator — none of which your distributor handles.

Do I earn publishing royalties from streaming?

Yes. Every stream generates a publishing performance royalty and a publishing mechanical royalty, on top of the recording royalty. If you haven't registered to collect them, that money goes uncollected.

Do I need a publisher to collect publishing royalties?

No. You can self-administer by joining a PRO and a mechanical society directly. A publishing administrator is optional and simply automates worldwide collection for a percentage.

Who collects publishing royalties in India?

IPRS administers compositions in India, collecting on behalf of authors, composers, and publishers. You join IPRS as a member and register your works to start collecting.

What's the difference between a composition and a sound recording?

The composition is the underlying song — the lyrics and melody. The sound recording is the specific recorded version (the master). They are two distinct copyrights with two distinct income streams.

Abhiraj Singh
Abhiraj Singh
Founder & CEO

Abhiraj has spent 18 years inside the Indian music and live entertainment business. Early in his career he worked with artists who are now household names — Guru Randhawa, Badshah, and Honey Singh — back when they were still building their first audiences. Today he runs Grootin, helping independent artists and labels across India get their music onto every major streaming platform in the world.

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