How much will Spotify actually pay you?
Enter your streams to see the real payout, or flip it around: tell us your goal and we’ll show the streams you need. Then see exactly how much lands in your account after your distributor takes its cut.
How to use it
Two ways to run the numbers, depending on what you want to know.
Pick your mode
Use the toggle at the top. Streams to money tells you what a stream count is worth. Money to streams works backwards from a payout goal to the streams you need.
Enter your number
Type your monthly or total streams, or in goal mode, the amount you want to earn. Everything recalculates as you type, so try a few figures.
Compare across platforms
The bars show what the same play earns on Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal and more, so you can see where your streams are worth most.
Check your real take-home
Scroll to the distributor section to see what actually lands in your account after a flat-fee versus a percentage-cut distributor. The gap surprises most people.
Not all platforms pay the same
The same stream is worth very different amounts depending on where it happens. Here’s the rough per-stream rate across the major platforms today.
Approximate per-stream rates. Tidal and Apple pay more per play, but Spotify’s scale usually still earns artists the most overall.
What you actually keep after the distributor
Spotify pays your distributor, not you. Most pass through 100% for a flat fee — but some take a percentage of every royalty, forever. Here’s your take-home on the streams above.
Why no two streams pay the same
The “per-stream rate” is an average, not a fixed price. Four things move it, and knowing them is how you stop guessing.
It’s a pool, not a price
Spotify pools all subscription and ad revenue each month, then splits it by each track’s share of total streams. More Premium subscribers that month, bigger pool, higher per-stream rate. It moves constantly.
Premium beats free, by a lot
A stream from a paying US subscriber can be worth three to four times one from a free-tier listener in a lower-income market. An audience that skews Premium simply earns more per play.
The 1,000-stream threshold
Since 2024, a track must hit at least 1,000 streams in a rolling 12 months before it earns anything. Below that, those micro-royalties get redirected to bigger tracks.
Your distributor’s cut comes last
Whatever Spotify pays, your distributor handles it first. A flat-fee distributor passes through everything. A percentage-cut one quietly keeps a slice of every royalty you ever earn.
The Independent Release Checklist
The step-by-step list that takes a finished track from your DAW to every streaming platform — without leaving money or metadata on the table.
- Pre-release metadata and splits, done right
- Loudness targets so streaming doesn’t crush your master
- The royalty types most artists never register for
- Distributor checklist so you keep 100%
Get the checklist
Free. Straight to your inbox.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
Confirm your email and the checklist is yours. See you in there.
Before you pick a distributor
The calculator shows the take-home gap between a flat-fee and a percentage-cut distributor is huge over time. We’ve reviewed the ones worth using so you choose with the numbers in front of you.
Questions, answered
How much does Spotify pay per stream?
Roughly $0.003 to $0.005 per stream, with most independent artists landing near $0.004. It isn’t fixed: Spotify pools revenue monthly and splits it by stream share, so your real rate shifts with the season and your audience.
How many streams to earn $1,000?
At the $0.004 average, around 250,000 streams. At a conservative $0.003 it’s closer to 333,000. Use the goal mode above to plug in any target and see the exact number.
Does Spotify pay me directly?
No. Spotify pays your distributor, who then pays you. A flat-fee distributor passes through 100%; a percentage-based one keeps a cut of every royalty. Over a track’s life that difference adds up fast, which is what the take-home section shows.
Why is my real rate lower than the calculator?
Free-tier listeners, lower-income markets, and distributor or label splits all pull the effective rate down. Treat any calculator as a ballpark, then check your distributor statements for your true number.
Does mastering louder earn more?
No. Spotify normalises playback to around -14 LUFS, so a louder master just gets turned down. It can actually cost you dynamics. Master for the platform, not against it.

