PRS for Music
Performing Right Society for Music — the UK CMO that administers both performance and mechanical rights on behalf of its songwriter, composer, and publisher members. PRS licenses broadcasters, venues, and streaming services, and distributes royalties to members in the UK and via international reciprocal agreements.
Articles sur PRS for Music

Signed Up With the Wrong PRO? Here's How It's Costing You Money
Signed up with the wrong PRO affiliation and wondering what it is costing you? Misaligned registrations and incorrect PRO membership can divert composition, neighboring, and digital performance royalties away from you or leave payments unmatched in society accounts.

Why Your Sync Placements Aren't Paying What They Should
If your sync placements are earning far less than they should, you are probably losing sync royalties without realizing where the leaks are. This practical guide shows the exact diagnostic checklist and remediation lanes you can run now — metadata and ownership fixes, cue sheet and usage reporting, and PRO and neighboring rights reclamation.

Best Performing Rights Organizations for Independent Artists
Choosing the best PRO for independent artists can be the difference between getting paid for performances and leaving money uncollected. This list compares the top PROs and complementary collection services across territory, membership rules, payout cadence, international reach, and practical strengths so you can pick the right fit and recover royalties you might be missing.

The Top Collection Societies Every International Artist Should Know About
Releasing music globally means plays and broadcasts get logged in dozens of territories — and most creators leave money on the table by not registering with the right collecting bodies. This guide lists the music royalty collection societies worldwide that matter, explains what each actually collects, who should register, and gives practical next steps to claim royalties across borders.

Millions in Music Royalties Go Unclaimed Every Year — Is Yours One of Them?
Millions sit in accounts labeled unclaimed music royalties each year because bad metadata, split errors, and cross-border gaps hide rightful owners from collecting societies and platforms. This article shows exactly where to look, the databases and documents that matter, and a short audit you can run in an afternoon — plus realistic choices for DIY recovery or using a specialist.

The Most Expensive Music Publishing Mistakes Independent Artists Make
Independent artists routinely leak thousands in royalties through predictable music publishing mistakes that rarely show up on royalty dashboards. This post pinpoints the seven costliest errors, quantifies typical revenue impact, and gives step-by-step fixes with the exact organizations and forms to use - from BMI and The MLC to SoundExchange and major international CMOs - so you can recover missed income and stop future losses.

How to Register Your Songs With a Performing Rights Organization Step by Step
Knowing how to register songs with a PRO is the single most effective step an independent writer can take to start collecting public performance royalties . This concise, step-by-step guide shows exactly what metadata to gather, how to set writer and publisher splits, when to register recordings with SoundExchange or neighbor rights societies, and how to verify and correct registrations so you do not lose revenue.

How to Collect Every Royalty You're Owed as an Independent Musician
If you release your own music, you are probably leaving money on the table. This practical playbook shows how to collect music royalties at every step — from a catalog audit and correct metadata to registering with PROs, SoundExchange, and mechanical and neighboring rights societies, plus how to file retroactive claims.

DistroKid vs TuneCore Publishing Administration: Which Pays More?
DistroKid vs TuneCore publishing is the question every independent songwriter asks when deciding how to collect the publisher share of their royalties. This article compares each service using published commission rates, fee models, territory coverage, and reporting differences so you can see which one delivers higher net payouts in realistic scenarios.