For two years, the biggest story in AI music licensing played out in courtrooms. In 2026, it moved to the negotiating table. The major record companies that sued the AI song generators Suno and Udio for training on their catalogues have started signing licensing deals with them instead, and a new wave of opt-in programmes is finally giving independent artists a seat of their own. For self-releasing musicians and DIY labels, the question has shifted from “will anyone stop this?” to “should I opt in, and on what terms?”
Here is where the deals stand, what they change for independent artists, and the practical decisions facing anyone with a catalogue in 2026.
From Lawsuits to Licensing: How 2026 Changed the AI Music Business
The turn began in late 2025. Warner Music Group settled its litigation and struck a licensing partnership with Suno on 25 November 2025, days after announcing a comparable deal with Udio. Universal Music Group had already settled with Udio in October. In a single autumn, two of the three majors traded lawsuits for contracts.
Then came a first. On 20 November 2025, Universal, Sony and Warner all signed licensing deals with the same startup, the AI music company Klay, whose “Large Music Model” is trained entirely on licensed recordings. It made Klay the first AI music venture to land agreements with all three majors and their publishing arms at once. Suno, for its part, arrived at the table as a heavyweight: it had just closed a $250 million funding round at a $2.45 billion valuation and, as part of the Warner pact, acquired the live-music discovery platform Songkick.
Warner chief executive Robert Kyncl framed the Suno deal as proof that “AI becomes pro-artist when it adheres to our principles,” calling it “a victory for the creative community that benefits everyone.” The common thread across the agreements is opt-in licensing: artists and songwriters individually decide whether their names, images, likenesses, voices and compositions can be used in new AI-generated music.
Suno, Udio and the Walled-Garden Question
The two headline deals are not the same. Under its Warner agreement, Suno keeps its core text-to-song service but has committed to retiring its current models and training only on licensed works from 2026, while moving audio downloads behind paid tiers. Udio’s deal reshapes the product more drastically, turning it into a “walled garden” where users remix and mash up licensed music but nothing they create can leave the platform.
Suno chief executive Mikey Shulman said the partnership “unlocks a bigger, richer Suno experience for music lovers.” Not everyone has signed on, though. Universal remains in litigation with Suno after settlement talks stalled in April 2026, with UMG digital chief Michael Nash pointing to Suno’s resistance to the walled-garden model as the sticking point. Sony has not settled with either company. A summary-judgment hearing on whether training on copyrighted recordings constitutes fair use is expected in mid-2026, and industry observers note the ruling could set a precedent no matter how the private deals land.
What the Major-Label Deals Mean for Independent Artists
Here is the catch for the people who read PopHits: the major-label agreements cover major-label catalogues. Independent artists whose tracks may have trained the earlier models were not at that table, and the labels’ settlements do nothing directly for them. Opt-in consent also gets complicated fast. A modern song often has several writers spread across different publishers, and if one declines, the whole track can fall out of a licensed dataset.
There is a structural gap here, too. Most independent catalogues do not sit inside a major; they sit with distributors and aggregators. So if AI music licensing is going to reach the long tail of the business, it has to come through the companies that already hold indie releases, not through the majors’ private deals. That is exactly what a second wave of programmes is built to do.
The Indie Opt-In Arrives: LANDR’s Fair Trade AI
The most concrete example landed in July 2026. Distribution and mastering company LANDR expanded its Fair Trade AI programme, an opt-in scheme that pays artists when their music is licensed for AI training. LANDR raised the artist share to 25% of net licensing revenue, up from 20%, and opened a $1 million advance fund, reported at roughly $5 per eligible track and recoupable against future royalties, with opt-ins open through 20 July 2026. First payouts are due later this month.
The programme has grown to more than 30,000 participating artists and hundreds of thousands of opted-in tracks, creating a pool of fully licensed, professionally tagged music that AI developers can pay to access. It is open to LANDR Distribution users, and artists on other distributors can move their catalogues in using the platform’s Release Importer before opting in.
“We’re proving there’s another path, one built on consent and providing recurring revenue for artists,” said LANDR chief executive Pascal Pilon. Daniel Rowland, the company’s VP of strategy and partnerships, framed it as distribution’s next job: “helping creators find new ways to monetise their work, wherever it creates value.”
The Money Question: Advances, Recoupment and Real Revenue
For an independent artist, the appeal is obvious: a new, largely passive revenue line from a catalogue that is otherwise sitting idle. The numbers deserve a clear-eyed look, though. A roughly $5-per-track advance is modest, and because it is recoupable, it is drawn against future licensing income rather than added on top of it. The 25% share is of net revenue, after costs, so real payouts will depend on how much AI developers actually spend buying licensed data.
There is a reason clean, well-tagged catalogues are becoming valuable. Streaming services are being buried under machine-made uploads: Deezer has reported receiving tens of thousands of fully AI-generated tracks a day, and Spotify has removed tens of millions of spam or low-quality uploads over the past year. In that flood, a rights-cleared, human-made dataset is a scarce commodity, and that scarcity is what programmes like Fair Trade AI are selling on artists’ behalf. For a longer view on how streaming income itself is calculated, our breakdown of Spotify’s latest royalties debate is a useful companion read.
What Independent Artists Can Do Now
The practical takeaways for 2026 are straightforward:
- Read the terms before opting in. Check the revenue share, whether any advance is recoupable, and how long the licence lasts. Deadlines are real: LANDR’s advance window closes on 20 July 2026.
- Know your controls. The standard emerging from the major deals is consent over name, image, likeness, voice and compositions. Any programme you join should offer the same.
- Watch the pushback. The American Federation of Musicians has sued Universal and Warner over their AI settlements, arguing performers were not properly consulted, a reminder that the ground rules are still being written.
- Expect the market to keep shifting. Radio group iHeartRadio adopted a “Guaranteed Human” policy that pulled AI vocals from the air, and at least one viral track was re-recorded without AI after a takedown. What counts as acceptable is still moving.
None of this tells an artist whether to embrace AI licensing or steer clear; that is a personal call about your music and your values. What has changed in 2026 is that the choice now comes with real terms, real money attached and, for the first time, a door open to independents rather than only the majors.

