The legal side of the music industry can feel confusing, especially when contracts start using terms like masters, territory, recoupment, exclusivity, publishing rights, and work made for hire. For artists, labels, and managers, understanding the basics before you sign can help you protect your rights, ask better questions, and make a deal that fits your career.
Below, we’ll break down 6 common types of record label contracts, what each one usually covers, and the contract terms artists should review carefully. This is general education, not legal advice, so always have an experienced entertainment attorney review any agreement before you sign.
Key Takeaways
- Not every label contract gives away ownership. Some deals transfer rights, while others license specific recordings for a set term.
- Masters and publishing are different rights. A recording contract may cover the sound recording, while a publishing agreement covers the underlying song composition.
- Exclusivity matters. An exclusive deal can limit where and how you release music during the contract term.
- Recoupment affects when you get paid. If a label advances money, it may recover that advance from your royalties before additional payments are made.
- Always review term, territory, royalty rate, ownership, accounting, approval rights, and exit options before signing.
6 Types of Record Label Contracts
Record label agreements can vary widely, but most deals come back to one core question: who controls the recordings, for how long, in which territories, and in exchange for what support or payment?
Before getting into the specific contract types, it helps to understand two important rights:
- Master rights: These are the rights in the actual sound recording, also called the master recording.
- Publishing rights: These are the rights in the underlying composition, including the melody and lyrics.
The U.S. Copyright Office explains that a sound recording and the underlying musical work can be separate copyrighted works, which is why record deals and publishing deals often need to be reviewed separately. You can learn more from the U.S. Copyright Office’s sound recording guidance.
1. Exclusive Recording Contract
An exclusive recording contract means the artist agrees to record and release music only through that label during the contract period. This type of agreement is often used when a label plans to invest heavily in an artist’s career through recording costs, marketing, promotion, playlist pitching, video support, tour support, or other services.
The exclusivity may apply to:
- The artist: The artist may not be able to release new music with another label or distributor during the term.
- The recordings: The label may receive ownership or an exclusive license to specific master recordings.
- Future releases: The agreement may include delivery commitments, options for additional albums or singles, and rules around when the label can pick up those options.
Artists should pay close attention to whether the label is taking ownership of the masters or only licensing them, how long the label controls the recordings, what the royalty rate is, what expenses are recoupable, and what happens if the label does not release the music on time.
2. Music Distribution Contract
A music distribution contract gives a distributor the right to deliver your music to streaming platforms, download stores, social platforms, and sometimes physical retail. In many distribution deals, the artist or label keeps ownership of the master recordings while the distributor handles delivery, reporting, and royalty payments.
Distribution agreements usually define:
- Term: How long the distributor can distribute the music.
- Territory: Where the distributor can distribute the music.
- Revenue share or fee: How the distributor is paid.
- Services: Whether the deal includes only delivery or additional support like marketing, playlist pitching, royalty tools, analytics, sync opportunities, or rights management.
- Takedown rules: How and when you can remove releases or move them to another distributor.
This type of deal can be a strong fit for artists and independent labels that want to keep more control while still getting professional release support. If you’re comparing distribution options, check whether the agreement includes services beyond delivery. Symphonic Partner, for example, supports established artists, labels, managers, and distributors with music distribution, marketing, business intelligence, and other growth tools. Learn more about Symphonic Partner.
3. Non-Exclusive Recording Contract
A non-exclusive recording contract allows a label, company, or partner to use specific recordings without locking the artist into an exclusive relationship. That means the artist may still be able to release other music through different labels, distributors, or partners, depending on the agreement.
This type of contract is often used for short-term projects, compilations, licensing opportunities, catalog releases, or one-off singles. It can also serve as a lower-risk way for an artist and label to test a working relationship before agreeing to a longer exclusive deal.
Even though the deal is non-exclusive, artists should still review the details carefully. Important terms include which recordings are covered, how long the partner can use them, whether the license is worldwide or limited to certain territories, how revenue is split, and whether the partner can sublicense the recordings to third parties.
4. 360 Deal Recording Contract
A 360 deal is a broader artist agreement where a label or music company participates in multiple parts of an artist’s career, not just recorded music. In exchange for investing in the artist’s overall growth, the company may receive a percentage of revenue from areas like:
- Recorded music
- Publishing or songwriting income
- Live performance income
- Merchandise
- Brand partnerships
- Sponsorships
- Sync licensing
These deals became more common as the music business shifted from physical sales to streaming, touring, merchandise, sync, and direct fan monetization. A 360 deal can provide valuable resources, but it can also affect income streams that an artist may otherwise control separately.
Before signing a 360 deal, artists should ask what the company is actually providing in each area. If the company takes a percentage of touring, merch, or sponsorship income, the agreement should clearly explain what support the company will contribute to help grow those revenue streams.
If you’re still learning how artist income works across different revenue sources, this royalties checklist for independent artists is a helpful next read.
📚 Want to learn more? Check these out…
Understanding Advances: Everything You Need to Know
6 Common Questions To Ask An Entertainment Attorney
Onboarding Artists: What Indie Labels Should Have in Place Before Signing Anyone
What Is Sync Licensing? A Beginner’s Guide for Musicians
5. Music Composition and Recording Service Contract
A music composition and recording service contract is typically used when a company hires an artist, composer, producer, or musician to create custom music for a specific project, such as a film, TV show, commercial, trailer, podcast, brand campaign, or video game.
Under this type of agreement, the creator may be paid a one-time fee to compose, arrange, record, and deliver the music. In some cases, the company may request full ownership of the finished work. In other cases, the company may only need a license to use the music in a specific project.
Artists should be especially careful with language around work made for hire, copyright assignment, credit, backend royalties, approval rights, and reuse of the music outside the original project. Under U.S. copyright law, works made for hire can have different ownership and copyright-duration rules than individually owned works, so this language should be reviewed by an attorney before signing. You can read more about copyright duration in 17 U.S. Code § 302.
This type of contract may also address whether the company can use the artist’s name, image, voice, likeness, or bio to promote the project. The artist may also have to guarantee that the music is original and does not infringe on anyone else’s rights.
6. Recording and Publishing Agreement on Certain Recordings
A recording and publishing agreement gives a label or music company rights in both the master recording and the underlying composition for specific songs. This is different from a standard recording agreement, which may only cover the sound recording.
Under this type of agreement, the artist or songwriter may receive an advance, royalties, and support for release, promotion, sync licensing, or performance opportunities. In exchange, the company may receive rights to exploit both the recording and the composition.
Common terms include:
- Master rights: Whether the label owns the recordings or receives an exclusive license for a set period.
- Publishing rights: Whether the company controls all or part of the publisher’s share for the composition.
- Term: How long the company controls the master rights and publishing rights.
- Advance and recoupment: Whether upfront payments are recouped from future royalties.
- Release commitment: Whether the label must release the music within a certain window.
- Sync rights: Whether the company can pitch the song for TV, film, advertising, trailers, games, and other media.
This kind of contract can be useful when a company is actively investing in both the release and the song’s licensing potential. However, artists should be clear on exactly which rights are being granted and whether the company has the experience and relationships to create value on both the master and publishing sides.
If your agreement includes sync language, it’s worth understanding how sync licensing works before you sign. Start with this guide on what sync licensing is, then review Symphonic’s sync licensing services if you’re looking for support with film, TV, ads, promos, trailers, and video games.
What to Review Before Signing Any Record Label Contract
No matter which type of record label contract you’re reviewing, these terms deserve close attention:
- Ownership: Are you transferring ownership, granting an exclusive license, or granting a non-exclusive license?
- Term: How long does the deal last, and are there automatic renewal options?
- Territory: Is the deal worldwide or limited to specific countries?
- Exclusivity: Can you release music elsewhere during the contract period?
- Royalty rate: What percentage do you earn, and what revenue is included?
- Recoupment: Which expenses can the label recover before you receive royalties?
- Accounting: How often will you receive statements and payments?
- Creative approval: Who approves artwork, release dates, remixes, videos, marketing, and sync placements?
- Delivery requirements: How many songs or albums are you required to deliver?
- Exit rights: What happens if the label does not release or promote the music?
Digital performance royalties are also worth understanding. In the United States, SoundExchange collects and distributes certain digital performance royalties for sound recordings from non-interactive digital services. According to SoundExchange, 45% is paid directly to featured artists, 5% to a fund for non-featured artists, and 50% to the sound recording rights owner. You can learn more from SoundExchange’s digital performance royalties guide.
Quick Comparison of Record Label Contract Types
| Contract Type | Best For | Main Risk to Review |
|---|---|---|
| Exclusive recording contract | Longer label partnerships with deeper investment | Loss of release flexibility and master control |
| Music distribution contract | Artists and labels that want distribution while keeping ownership | Unclear fees, takedown rules, or service commitments |
| Non-exclusive recording contract | One-off releases, compilations, and short-term projects | Broad sublicensing rights or vague usage terms |
| 360 deal | Artists receiving broad career support | Giving up revenue from areas the company may not actively support |
| Composition and recording service contract | Custom music for film, TV, ads, games, and branded projects | Work made for hire language and full copyright assignment |
| Recording and publishing agreement | Deals covering both masters and compositions | Transferring too much control over both sides of the song |
Questions Artists Should Ask Before Signing
- Who owns the masters after the deal ends?
- Does the label own the recordings, or are they only licensing them?
- How long does the contract last?
- Can the label extend the deal through options?
- What costs are recoupable?
- When and how will royalty statements be delivered?
- Can the artist audit the label’s accounting?
- Who approves sync placements, remixes, samples, videos, and brand uses?
- What happens if the label does not release the music?
- Does the agreement cover publishing, merch, touring, sponsorships, or other income streams?
If you’re building or running an independent label, having organized agreements from the start can prevent bigger issues later. This guide on what indie labels should have in place before signing artists is a great next step.
To Wrap Things Up
Understanding the different types of record label contracts can help you protect your rights, compare opportunities, and make smarter decisions for your career. Some deals are built around distribution. Others are built around ownership, publishing, advances, or full career partnerships. The best option depends on your goals, leverage, catalog, team, and long-term plan.
Before signing anything, read the fine print, ask questions, understand what you’re giving up, and speak with an entertainment attorney who knows music contracts. A good deal should not just sound exciting upfront. It should also be clear, fair, and aligned with where you want your career to go.
You got this. 💪
FAQ: Record Label Contracts
What is a record label contract?
A record label contract is an agreement between an artist and a label or music company that explains how recordings will be created, released, promoted, monetized, and controlled. It usually covers rights, royalties, term, territory, ownership, accounting, and the responsibilities of both parties.
What is the difference between a recording contract and a distribution contract?
A recording contract often gives a label broader rights in the master recordings and may include funding, marketing, promotion, and creative commitments. A distribution contract is usually more focused on getting music delivered to platforms and paying royalties back to the artist or label, often while the artist or label keeps ownership of the masters.
Do artists always give up their masters when signing a record deal?
No. Some record deals transfer ownership of the masters to the label, but others grant the label a license for a specific term and territory. Artists should review the ownership language carefully before signing.
What is recoupment in a record label contract?
Recoupment means the label can recover certain approved expenses, such as advances, recording costs, marketing costs, or video costs, from the artist’s royalties before additional royalty payments are made. The contract should clearly explain which costs are recoupable.
Should I have a lawyer review a record label contract?
Yes. Record label contracts can affect your income, ownership, release schedule, creative control, and long-term rights. An entertainment attorney can help you understand the deal, negotiate better terms, and avoid signing away more than necessary.