Ask an independent artist about music distribution in 2026 and the conversation rarely opens with which service moves a track to Spotify fastest. Getting music onto the platforms is a solved problem. The IFPI reported that recorded music revenue reached a record $31.7 billion in 2025, with streaming alone worth more than $22 billion, and roughly 106,000 new tracks now land on streaming services every single day. When delivery is that cheap and that universal, picking a distributor stops being a logistics question and becomes a marketing one.
That shift is quiet but decisive. For a decade the pitch was simple: pay a small fee, reach every streaming service. Every distributor now does that equally well, so the fee alone tells an artist almost nothing about which one will actually help a release find listeners.
The Delivery Pipe Became a Commodity
The headline numbers explain why. Streaming made up 69.6 percent of recorded music revenue in 2025, with paid subscriptions passing 837 million accounts worldwide, and the market grew 6.4 percent for its eleventh straight year of gains, Billboard reported from the same IFPI data. Independent artists and labels now account for roughly 38 percent of the recorded market, according to industry analyses of the 2026 landscape.
Behind those figures sits a plainer truth. DistroKid, TuneCore, CD Baby, Amuse and UnitedMasters all deliver to the same set of platforms, and a track from any of them lands in the same Spotify and Apple Music catalogues as a track from a major label. The pipe is undifferentiated. What is not undifferentiated is the roughly 106,000 tracks arriving every day, a figure up about seven percent year over year. Delivery is free-flowing; attention is not.
Where the Money Actually Leaks
The sticker price of a distributor is the least interesting number attached to it. The real cost sits in three quieter layers. The first is royalty commission: a lifetime one-time distributor such as CD Baby keeps a 9 percent cut of streaming income for as long as the release stays live, which compounds across an entire catalogue. The second is renewal mechanics, where a pay-per-release plan can quietly total hundreds of dollars a year just to keep a back catalogue online. A pay-per-release plan priced around 25 dollars per single, for instance, quietly totals 500 dollars a year across twenty active singles, none of which buys a single extra listener. The third, and the one artists notice last, is the marketing stack bought separately.
Smart links, an ad-buying tool, playlist pitching and listener analytics purchased one by one can run 40 to 60 dollars a month, set against a distribution fee that might be 25 dollars a year, as a 2026 breakdown of the distribution market laid out. Add the platform economics on top: since April 2024 a track needs at least 1,000 streams in the prior year to earn recording royalties on Spotify at all, which redistributes money away from the smallest catalogues. Ownership is shifting too. Universal Music Group completed its 775 million dollar purchase of Downtown Music, the parent of CD Baby, in February 2026, folding one of the best-known indie distributors inside a major.
The New Comparison Is Marketing, Not Price
Because delivery is equal, the comparison artists actually make in music distribution in 2026 is about the marketing layer wrapped around it. Some distributors bundle little more than a release page and a smart link. Others add ad tools, editorial and algorithmic playlist pitching, and analytics that follow the listener rather than just counting plays. A newer wave of subscription services launched through 2026 folds the whole stack into a single monthly fee.
None of this makes any one distributor the right answer. A hobbyist releasing twice a year and a producer shipping a single every month have opposite needs, and a tool that suits one is dead weight for the other. The useful question is no longer which distributor is cheapest, but whether its marketing tools match how often an artist releases and how hard they intend to promote.
What the 2026 Distributor Landscape Looks Like
Four broad models now sit side by side. Pay-per-release charges a yearly fee for each single or album, which rewards a small, deliberate output. Subscription-unlimited plans charge one annual fee for as many uploads as an artist wants, which rewards volume. The lifetime one-time model charges once per release and keeps it live indefinitely, trading a commission for permanence. And free tiers deliver at no cost in exchange for a percentage of royalties. In round 2026 terms that looks like roughly 25 dollars a year for an unlimited subscription such as DistroKid, a one-time fee near 10 dollars a single on CD Baby alongside its 9 percent cut, a free UnitedMasters tier that keeps a 10 percent royalty share, and per-release pricing on TuneCore that scales with output. The right fit depends entirely on how much an artist releases and how hard they plan to promote it.
Each carries a trade-off worth reading before committing, especially around what happens when an artist stops paying. Some services take a catalogue down on cancellation unless the artist buys an add-on, while lifetime and catalogue-retention models keep releases live. With a major now owning CD Baby, the independent-versus-major line that once defined this market is blurrier than it has ever been.
Discovery, Not Distribution, Is the Bottleneck
The deeper reason distribution turned into a marketing choice is that discovery is now the scarce resource. With more than 106,000 tracks uploaded daily, playlists and recommendation algorithms have become the real gatekeepers, and no amount of flawless delivery moves a song that nothing points listeners toward. The tools that matter are the ones that build an audience an artist actually owns. Streaming payouts reward repeat listening and saves, so a release that turns curious first-time plays into loyal followers earns far more over its life than one that spikes and vanishes.
That is why a direct mailing list has quietly become more valuable than a social following, converting fans at far higher rates than any feed, and why short-form video remains the single strongest discovery surface even as campaigns on it grow more structured. A distributor that bundles those levers is selling marketing, not logistics, whatever it calls itself.
How Independent Artists Are Choosing Now
The practical framework that has emerged sorts by intent. A hobbyist with no growth plan is well served by a free or low-cost tier and can ignore the marketing bells entirely. An album artist with a stable catalogue often values permanence and predictable costs over promotional extras. An active-growth artist releasing several times a year and running ads needs the bundled marketing layer, and should weigh royalty splits and cancellation policies before locking in. Labels and managers, finally, compare on per-artist seat economics rather than headline price.
The same logic runs through the wider debate over how streaming money is shared out and over who controls the rights to a recording: the value has migrated from making a track available to getting it heard and paid for. For independent artists weighing their options this year, the honest starting question is no longer where to upload, but which marketing engine is worth renting to reach the next listener. In music distribution in 2026, that is the decision that counts.

