Spotify and YouTube do not pay a “fixed rate” per stream. Instead, they use a pro-rata system based on total revenue and market share. On average, a Spotify stream is worth roughly $0.003 to $0.005, but that money is split into two halves: the Master share (for the recording) and the Publishing share (for the song). Most artists only collect the Master share, leaving 15–20% of their total potential earnings behind.


Calculating royalties on streaming platforms feels like a math problem that never ends. Between “Pools,” “Market Shares,” and “Service Deductions,” it is easy to get lost.

However, for an independent songwriter, the most important thing to understand is that one stream generates two different royalty payments.

1. The Spotify Calculation: The “Stream-O-Nomics.”

Spotify doesn’t pay you directly; they pay into a giant pool of money.

The Breakdown of that 70%:

The Audiobulb Advantage: If you only have a distributor, you are only seeing the ~55%. The ~15% for the songwriting (Mechanicals) stays with the streaming service or goes to a “Black Box” because there is no publisher registered to claim it.


2. The YouTube Calculation: The “Hybrid” Platform

YouTube is more complex because it pays based on Ads and YouTube Premium views.

How YouTube “Content ID” Works for Publishers:

Even if someone else uploads your song to their video, you are entitled to the money!

  1. Audiobulb registers your song in YouTube’s Content ID system.
  2. YouTube scans every video on the platform.
  3. When it finds your song, it “claims” the video.
  4. The ad revenue from that video is redirected to you (the songwriter/publisher).

3. The “Service Centric” vs. “User Centric” Models

In 2025, many platforms are moving toward a “User-Centric” or “Artistic-Centric” model. This means that instead of a giant pool, the money follows the specific listener. This rewards “Real Fans” rather than viral hits.

PlatformEstimated Pay Per StreamWho gets the Publishing Share?
Tidal / Apple Music$0.008 – $0.01Publisher / Admin
Spotify$0.003 – $0.005Publisher / Admin
YouTube (Video)$0.0006 – $0.001Publisher / Admin

Why the “Publishing Part” Is the Hardest to Collect

Distributors make it easy to collect the Master share. You upload a song, and they give you a dashboard.

The Publishing part is harder because:

  1. Multiple Sources: Publishing money on Spotify is split into Performance (to your PRO) and Mechanical (to your Publisher).
  2. Global Fragmentation: Spotify pays Mechanical royalties to local societies in every country. To collect your “Publishing” money from streams in the UK, Germany, or India, you need a publisher who is registered in those specific countries.

How Audiobulb Ensures You Get 100%

Without a Publishing Administrator, your Spotify dashboard might look “complete,” but you are actually missing a second, smaller check.


FAQ: Streaming Calculations

Why is my YouTube “Estimated Revenue” different from my actual check?

YouTube’s internal dashboard often only shows the Master/Partner share. The Publishing share is usually paid 6–9 months later through your publisher, which is why it doesn’t show up in your “Studio” app immediately.

Does a stream from a free user pay less than a Premium user?

Yes. Premium streams generally pay 3 to 4 times more than “Ad-Supported” (Free) streams. This is why having a global publisher is vital; we can track exactly which types of streams are coming from where.

If I have 1 million streams, how much am I missing in Publishing?

On average, 1 million Spotify streams might generate $3,500 in total.


Summary

Spotify and YouTube are not “black holes” of money; they are just complex. If you only have a distributor, you are only collecting the “Master” portion of your earnings.6

Your Next Step: Don’t leave your 15% in the hands of the streaming platforms. Register with Audiobulb to start collecting the publishing share of every single stream your music gets.