Why Should This Concern You?
Many artists sign with a digital distributor, pay the annual subscription fee, and move on without a second thought. But when a distributor raises its prices — something that happens regularly in this industry — artists suddenly face a different equation: the same music, but a thinner profit margin or a higher cost eating into their income.
Understanding how this works is essential for any artist who relies on music as a source of income.
How Do Price Increases Affect Your Earnings Specifically?
Most digital distribution platforms operate on one of two basic models:
- Fixed annual subscription model: You pay a set amount per year and keep most or all of your earnings. When the distributor raises that amount, your break-even point rises — meaning you need to earn more before you actually start making a profit.
- Percentage commission model: The distributor takes a cut of every dollar you earn. If that percentage goes up, your net income drops automatically, even if your streams and sales stay exactly the same.
In both cases, the hardest hit are mid-level artists — those earning enough to care, but not enough to easily absorb a sudden spike in costs.
Real-World Scenarios You Might Face
- Annual fees increase at renewal: You may not notice the difference until the renewal invoice arrives. At that point, your earlier calculations about expected returns are already out of date.
- New fees added for previously free services: Some distributors begin charging for things that used to be included — such as withdrawal fees or annual per-release maintenance fees.
- Contract terms changed without direct notice: A policy update gets buried on an internal page and automatically applies to your account unless you actively object.
Practical Steps to Protect Yourself
- Read the change clauses in your contract: Look for language like "the company reserves the right to modify pricing with X days' prior notice." That sentence defines exactly how much legal protection you actually have.
- Enable email notifications: Make sure the email address registered with your distributor is active and monitored — most official notices are sent there and nowhere else.
- Calculate your break-even point regularly: Divide your annual cost by your average monthly earnings. That number tells you how many months you're working just to cover distributor fees before you see any real profit.
- Distribute your catalog strategically: Relying on a single distributor means you're fully exposed to every decision they make. Spreading different releases across multiple platforms — where terms allow — reduces your vulnerability.
- Track your earnings yourself: Keep a spreadsheet logging monthly income for each release, so you can clearly compare figures before and after any pricing change.
- Know your cancellation rights: Before any automatic renewal, check whether you can withdraw your catalog and move it elsewhere. Some distributors impose notice periods or transfer restrictions — this is information you need to have in advance, not after the fact.
Why a Zero-Fee Model Matters
One structural solution to this problem is moving to a distributor that operates on zero commission with no subscription fees, like Mazufa's model. When there are no fees to begin with, there are no price increases to cut into your earnings. This doesn't mean every zero-fee option is the right fit for every artist — but it does mean that pricing structure should be a primary factor in your decision-making process.
The Bottom Line
A distributor raising its prices deserves a deliberate, informed response — not a delayed reaction after the damage is done. Monitor your contracts, run your numbers, and make sure the platform you trust with your music offers a transparent and stable pricing structure — or better yet, no fees at all.