As you watch the GRAMMYs each year, it seems as though the only people who win are always the Kanye’s and Beyoncés of the industry. What you may not know is that there are tons of other winners not shown on TV, most of whom are talented independent artists who have been working just as hard as you are now.
If you’re a talented musician with a strong release, it’s not as impossible as it may seem to get nominated for a GRAMMY. In fact, independent artists get nominated and WIN every year. Why not you?
If you want to make sure your music is considered, the Online Entry Process for the 69th Annual GRAMMY Awards runs from July 7, 2026, through August 21, 2026!
Here’s how to get involved…
Key Takeaways:
Independent artists can be submitted for GRAMMY consideration, but entries must come through an eligible Recording Academy member or registered media company, not through a public open submission form.
Eligibility starts with your release date and format. For 2027 GRAMMY consideration, recordings must be released between August 31, 2025, and August 28, 2026, and they must be commercially available through an accepted format such as streaming, digital download, or physical retail.
Your credits and metadata can affect who is eligible. Songwriters, producers, engineers, mixers, mastering engineers, featured artists, and other contributors may be eligible in certain categories, so names, roles, ISRCs, and release details should be checked before submission.
The Online Entry Period is only one part of the process. After entries are submitted, Recording Academy Voting Members participate in a first round to determine nominees, then a final round to determine winners.
A strong submission is not just about having a great song. Independent artists should also think about category fit, clean label copy, release documentation, press materials, and whether the recording has enough visibility among the right voting community.
How To Get Nominated For The 2027 GRAMMYs
Being able to flex your GRAMMY win is not only a personal flex, but a major win in the eyes of this competitive industry we call home. Adding this accomplishment to future press releases, EPKs, and more is a huge selling point that can definitely secure more interest in your work as you move through your career than you would without it.
Even now, when the “mainstream” isn’t always so mainstream, and the landscape of this business is continuously changing, the legitimacy and prestige of a GRAMMY will always be impressive.
To be eligible for submission, your release must meet these requirements:
- Release Date: For 2027 GRAMMY consideration, eligible recordings must be released between August 31, 2025 and August 28, 2026.
- Length: To be considered for album submission, a recording must contain at least five different tracks with a total playing time of at least 15 minutes, or have a total playing time of at least 30 minutes with no minimum track requirement. Singles have no such requirements.
- Format: A submitted recording must be commercially available, whether through physical retail, digital download, or a recognized streaming platform. Each submitted song should include proper metadata credits, including songwriters, producers, engineers, featured artists where applicable, and International Standard Recording Codes, or ISRCs, for each track.
- Original Material: Albums must meet the Recording Academy’s requirements for newly recorded material. Before submitting, make sure to check the most current GRAMMY rules and category guidelines for the 69th GRAMMY Awards, as the Academy updates rules and category criteria from year to year.
Are other credited personnel also eligible?
Yes!
In major categories like Album Of The Year, eligibility extends beyond the lead artist. Credited featured artists, songwriters of new material, producers, recording engineers, mixers, and mastering engineers may also be eligible to be nominated and win, depending on the category and current Academy rules.
That’s why accurate credits matter so much. Before submitting anything, double-check your metadata, splits, contributor names, roles, ISRCs, and release details across your distributor, label copy, and any internal documentation. A great campaign can’t fix messy credits after the fact.
How are entries submitted for the GRAMMYs?
To be submitted for GRAMMY consideration, a recording must be entered by eligible members of the Recording Academy or by registered media companies. Professional and Voting Members can submit eligible recordings through the Recording Academy’s Online Entry Process during the official submission window.
For the 2027 GRAMMYs, the Online Entry Period is July 7, 2026 through August 21, 2026. Media Company Registration runs from June 25, 2026, through August 14, 2026.
Before your music gets submitted for GRAMMY consideration, run through this checklist to make sure everything’s in good shape.
📌 NOTE: Some things, like your eligibility, credits, release details, and submission access, are part of the actual entry process. Others, like your EPK and awareness plan, aren’t required, but they can help you show up more prepared and give your release a stronger push.
Pre-Submission Readiness Checklist:
Before your music is submitted for GRAMMY consideration, take time to make sure your release, credits, and campaign materials are in order. A great song matters, but a clean and accurate submission can help prevent avoidable issues later in the process.
1. Confirm your release is eligible
Make sure your recording falls within the official eligibility period, is commercially available, and meets the format requirements for the category you plan to enter. For albums, double-check track count and total running time before submitting.
2. Choose the strongest category fit
Review the current GRAMMY category guidelines carefully. The best category is not always the biggest or most obvious one. Think about genre, recording style, audience, collaborators, and where your release can compete most credibly.
3. Audit your metadata and credits
Check all artist names, featured artists, songwriters, producers, engineers, mixers, mastering engineers, label information, release dates, track titles, and ISRCs. These details should match across your distributor, label copy, internal documents, and public platforms.
4. Verify contributor roles and splits
Make sure every contributor is credited accurately and that roles are clearly defined. This is especially important for categories where songwriters, producers, engineers, mixers, mastering engineers, or featured artists may also be eligible for nomination or recognition.
5. Prepare your release documentation
Keep your final masters, label copy, release links, UPCs, ISRCs, artwork, credits, lyrics, publishing information, and any relevant agreements organized in one place. This makes it easier to answer questions or correct issues before the submission window closes.
6. Make sure your music is easy to find and verify
Your release should be live on recognized platforms, properly titled, and connected to the correct artist profile. Check that there are no duplicate profiles, incorrect credits, wrong release dates, or missing tracks on major DSPs.
7. Update your press and artist materials
Refresh your EPK, artist bio, press photos, release description, notable press, playlist placements, tour history, chart activity, and other career highlights. These materials do not replace the official submission, but they can support awareness around your release.
8. Know who will submit the entry
Confirm whether the entry will be submitted by an eligible Recording Academy member or a registered media company. Do this before the Online Entry Period begins so you are not scrambling to find the right submission path at the last minute.
9. Build a realistic awareness plan
A GRAMMY campaign should focus on visibility, credibility, and education, not spam. Think through how you’ll share the story of the release, reach the right music community, highlight meaningful press, and keep your messaging accurate.
10. Review everything before the deadline
Before the entry is finalized, review the category, credits, spelling, links, release date, track details, and contributor information one more time. Small errors can create major headaches once the submission period closes.
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Want to learn more? 📚 Check out these helpful resources…
Music Biz 101: An Easy Guide To Music Royalties
What is Music Publishing and Who Can Collect Publishing Royalties?
Quick Guide to Taxes as an Independent Musician
How to Trademark Your Artist Name (Step-by-Step Guide for Musicians)
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How does the GRAMMY voting process work?
The GRAMMY voting process consists of two rounds:
ROUND ONE: Voting Members vote on the entries they believe should receive a nomination in their respective categories. Each category has a limited number of nomination slots, which is why even getting nominated is a major accomplishment. By the time the public sees the nominee list, those artists have already been selected from a much larger field of eligible submissions.
FINAL ROUND: Once the nominees in each category are set, the final voting round begins. Voting Members vote on the nominee in each of their eligible voting categories that they believe should win the GRAMMY. The nominee with the most votes wins.
On the night of the ceremony, the awards with broader popular appeal are usually televised. This typically includes categories like Album Of The Year, Record Of The Year, Song Of The Year, Best New Artist, and some of the bigger awards across major genres.
Many more awards are presented outside the main televised broadcast, and those categories are often where independent, niche, and genre-specific artists have a real shot.
What about the Latin GRAMMYs?
The Latin GRAMMYs follow a similar peer-voted structure, but they are run through the Latin Recording Academy. Members submit entries, recordings are placed into categories, and voting happens through a nomination round and a final round.
The biggest thing to remember is that the Latin GRAMMYs and the GRAMMYs are separate award processes with their own eligibility rules, submission windows, membership requirements, and category guidelines. If your music qualifies for both spaces, it’s worth paying close attention to each Academy’s deadlines.
(Check out our post, How To Get Nominated for the 27th Annual Latin GRAMMY Awards to get the full rundown…)
“…but what’re the odds I ACTUALLY get nominated?”
It’s a huge misconception that the GRAMMYs are only reserved for household names. Yes, major-label artists dominate the most visible categories, but the GRAMMYs cover a wide range of genres, crafts, and specialized fields. That creates more room than people realize for independent artists, producers, engineers, composers, and niche genre leaders to be recognized.
Here at Symphonic, we’ve had artists among us get nominated and even win. Catherine Russell was nominated for Best Jazz Vocal Album in 2019. Stewart Copeland and Ricky Kej’s Divine Tides won Best New Age Album. Steel Pulse has been nominated multiple times and won Best Reggae Recording for Babylon The Bandit.
The real takeaway? You don’t need to be the biggest artist in the world. You just need the right release in the right category with the right credits, submitted correctly, within the right window.
In Conclusion…
You have nothing to lose from shooting your shot. (As they say… shooters shoot.) Independent artists get nominated and win GRAMMYs every year. If you’re working hard to improve your craft, release great music, and build a serious career around your artistry, your work deserves the chance to be recognized at the highest level.
At the end of the day, awards don’t define the quality of your music, but recognition like this can absolutely open some major doors for you.
For the 2027 GRAMMYs, eligible recordings must be released between August 31, 2025, and August 28, 2026. The 69th Annual GRAMMY Awards will take place on February 7, 2027, with nominations announced on November 16, 2026.
To submit, log in to your Recording Academy Member account during the Online Entry Period and look for the OEP link on your dashboard. Once logged in, you’ll have access to helpful resources like category descriptions, rules and guidelines, timetable details, and entry tips to guide you through the process.
Important Dates for 2027 GRAMMY Consideration
In the meantime, here are some key dates to keep in mind for 2027 GRAMMY consideration:
- Product Eligibility Period: August 31, 2025, to August 28, 2026
- Media Company Registration: June 25, 2026, to August 14, 2026
- Online Entry Period: July 7, 2026, to August 21, 2026
- First Round Voting: October 12, 2026 to October 22, 2026
- 69th GRAMMY Awards Nominations Announcement: November 16, 2026
- Final Round Voting: December 10, 2026 to January 7, 2027
- 69th GRAMMY Awards: February 7, 2027