Credits on streaming platforms are pulled directly from the metadata you provide to your distributor (DistroKid, TuneCore, etc.) during the upload process. To ensure they show up correctly, you must use full legal names (not stage names) in the “Songwriter” and “Composer” fields. Once the song is live, Spotify and Apple Music “map” these names to their databases. However, seeing your name in the credits does not mean you are being paid your songwriting royalties—it only means you are being “recognized.”


1. The Rules of Professional Metadata

To ensure your credits look professional and are “clickable” (linking to your Songwriter Page), follow these 2025 standards:

2. How to Check and Fix Credits

PlatformWhere to LookHow to Fix
SpotifyClick the three dots ... next to a song > Show Credits.You must contact your distributor to send a metadata update.
Apple MusicClick the three dots ... > View Credits.Request a “Metadata Correction” from your distributor.
YouTube MusicExpand the “Description” or check the “Topic” video info.Update the “Credits” section in your distributor dashboard.

3. The “Credit Trap”: Why Visibility $\neq$ Profitability

Here is the most important lesson in the music business: Showing up in the “Credits” tab does nothing to put money in your pocket.

Your distributor sends your name to Spotify so it can be displayed. But Spotify does not pay songwriting royalties to your distributor. They pay them to Collection Societies and Publishing Administrators.

The Reality Check: If your name is listed as the songwriter on Spotify, but you haven’t registered that song with a publishing administrator, your money is being sent to a “Black Box.” It sits there for a few years, and if unclaimed, it is eventually given to major labels and top-charting artists.


4. Why Distribution Alone is Losing You Money

Most artists think “100% Royalties” from a distributor means 100% of the total pie. In reality, it only means 100% of the Master (Recording) share.

5. How Audiobulb Turns Credits into Cash

At Audiobulb, we believe that if your name is on the song, the money should be in your hand—all of it.


Summary

Getting your credits right is the first step toward professional recognition. Use your legal name and ensure your distributor has the correct metadata. But don’t stop at the “blue check” or the “View Credits” tab. If you want to actually get paid for the work you’ve done, you need to bridge the gap between distribution and administration.

Your Next Step: Are your credits already live on Spotify? Join Audiobulb for $19.99/year to ensure those credits are actually generating the songwriting royalties you’ve earned. We take zero commission, helping you claim 100% of your global revenue.