"How much is my music worth" is the question every songwriter, producer, recording artist, and rights heir eventually asks. The answer is more rigorous than most people expect. Modern music valuation has converged on a small set of methodologies that institutional buyers, brokers, qualified appraisers, and major catalog acquirers all use. Once you understand the framework, you can produce a defensible directional estimate of any catalog's value in an afternoon — and know exactly when to commission a formal appraisal.
This guide explains how songs and recordings are actually valued in 2026: the master versus publishing split, the Net Publisher Share multiple method, sync premiums, the four documents that prove income, and the tier of catalog where DIY estimation stops and qualified appraisal begins. None of it is mysterious. All of it is learnable.
The Two Assets You Actually Own
Before you can value music, you have to know exactly what kind of music intellectual property you are valuing. Every song-and-recording bundle splits into two distinct copyrights, owned and traded as completely separate assets:
The Composition (Publishing)
The underlying song — melody, lyrics, harmonic structure. Created the moment you write it down or record any version of it. Owned by the songwriters in the percentages they agreed (the split sheet). Generates four royalty streams:
- Performance royalties — every time the song plays on radio, TV, streaming services, in restaurants, at concerts, etc. Collected by ASCAP, BMI, SESAC, GMR (US) or the foreign equivalent.
- Mechanical royalties — every reproduction or stream of a recording. Collected by the MLC (US streaming) or directly via mechanical licenses.
- Sync royalties — when the composition is licensed for use in audiovisual content. Negotiated case by case.
- Print royalties — when sheet music of the composition is sold.
The Master Recording
The specific recording of the song — the actual audio file. Owned by whoever paid for the session and signed the producer/engineer agreements (typically the artist if self-released, the label if signed). Generates:
- Streaming and download royalties from Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon, etc.
- Master use fees when the recording itself is licensed for sync.
- Digital performance royalties for non-interactive streaming (SiriusXM, Pandora radio, webcasts), collected by SoundExchange in the US.
- Neighboring rights in foreign territories (separate from publishing performance).
Why the Split Matters for Valuation
Publishing typically attracts higher acquisition multiples than masters because the income is more diversified, longer-tailed, and less dependent on any single distribution platform. Masters are concentrated in streaming income, which is more volatile and platform-dependent. A self-released artist owns both and stacks their values. A signed artist who only owns their writer's share of publishing has a much smaller asset than they might assume.
The Four Documents That Prove Income
You cannot value music without seeing what it actually earns. Trailing royalty income is the single biggest input to any valuation. Pull these four documents for every song or catalog you want to value:
- PRO statements — quarterly statements from ASCAP, BMI, SESAC, or GMR showing performance royalty income by song. The trailing 3-5 years tell the story.
- MLC statements — monthly statements from the Mechanical Licensing Collective showing streaming mechanical royalties (US). For pre-2021 income, look for HFA / NMPA statements.
- Distributor statements — monthly statements from DistroKid, TuneCore, CD Baby, AWAL, Symphonic, Stem, or major label distribution showing master streaming royalties.
- SoundExchange statements — quarterly statements for digital performance royalties on the master.
For larger catalogs with publisher administrators (Kobalt, Songtrust, Concord, BMG, etc.), the administrator statement consolidates most of the above. Tax returns Schedule E confirms the total flowing through.
The Net Publisher Share Multiple Method
This is the dominant valuation methodology in 2026 for any catalog larger than a single song. Buyers, brokers, qualified appraisers, and institutional investors all calculate value as:
Catalog Value = Annual Net Publisher Share × Multiple
What NPS Actually Means
Net Publisher Share is the cash that hits the rights holder's bank account annually after all administrative deductions. For a self-published songwriter, NPS is essentially gross royalty income minus PRO and MLC processing fees. For a writer with an admin deal, NPS is gross minus the administrator's cut (typically 10-25%). For a writer with a co-publishing deal, NPS is the writer's actual retained share.
NPS is calculated as the trailing average over a representative period — usually 3 years for stable catalogs, 5 years for catalogs that need to smooth out hit-spike anomalies.
Multiple Drivers
- Stability of earnings. $50k a year for five straight years is more valuable than $100k followed by $30k declining.
- Trend direction. Growing catalogs command premium multiples; declining catalogs trade at discounts.
- Sync activity. Active sync placements drive multiples to the high end of the range. Buyers pay extra for sync momentum.
- Diversification. Income spread across many songs is worth more than equivalent income concentrated in one or two.
- Genre and era. Evergreen genres (classic rock, soul, country standards, holiday songs) hold value better than trend-driven genres.
- Composition vs master mix. Publishing-heavy catalogs trade at higher multiples than master-heavy ones.
- Rights complexity. Clean ownership with no co-writer disputes, no orphan rights, no terminations pending = cleaner due diligence = higher offer.
2026 Multiple Ranges
- Declining or single-hit catalog: 3x - 7x NPS
- Stable working-songwriter catalog: 8x - 12x NPS
- Established catalog with consistent earnings: 12x - 16x NPS
- Growing catalog with sync momentum: 15x - 20x NPS
- Iconic / legacy catalog: 20x - 30x+ NPS
Worked Example
A working independent songwriter has 80 songs registered with ASCAP. Trailing 3-year average annual income breaks down as:
- Performance royalties: $32,000
- Streaming mechanicals (MLC): $11,000
- Sync income (six placements averaged): $18,000
- Master streaming (self-released, DistroKid): $14,000
- SoundExchange digital performance: $4,000
- Total annual NPS: $79,000
Stable income, decent sync activity, mid-career trajectory. Multiple in the 10x-13x range. Catalog value: $790,000 - $1,030,000. A targeted brokered process could push the high end above $1.1M with a buyer competing for the sync growth story.
Want a fast directional estimate of your catalog's value? Get a free AI valuation.
Free Music Valuation →Sync Premium: The Multiplier That Most Sellers Miss
A song without sync history earns a baseline NPS multiple. The same song with three or more documented sync placements over the past 24 months earns a premium of 30-50% on the multiple. Why? Because sync income is high-margin, unpredictable, and proves the catalog has buyers in the audiovisual market — which is where most of the future upside in catalog ownership lives.
If your catalog has any sync activity at all, document it carefully:
- Every placement: project name, network or brand, year, license fee, term, exclusivity status.
- Cue sheets filed and confirmed.
- Performance royalty trailing from the placement (which often dwarfs the upfront fee).
- Renewal status — is the placement still in rotation or has the term expired?
One year of light sync activity that produced $15,000 of fees and $8,000 of trailing performance royalties effectively adds $200,000+ to the catalog's headline value because of the multiple uplift.
Single-Song Valuation
For a single song, the same NPS-multiple math applies but at smaller scale. A song earning $1,200 a year in steady royalties is worth $9,600 to $19,200 at the typical 8x-16x range. A song earning $200 a year is worth $1,600 to $3,200. Below roughly $100 a year in earnings, transaction costs eat into value and the song is generally not worth selling separately; it should be bundled into a larger catalog or held.
Single-song sales of high-earning songs do happen — Royalty Exchange and similar marketplaces auction them — but the buyer pool is narrower than for full catalogs, and pricing tends to settle at the lower end of the NPS multiple range.
The Master-Specific Valuation Path
Master recordings are valued similarly but with adjustments:
- Lower baseline multiples: typically 6x-12x annual master income, vs 8x-16x for publishing.
- Heavier dependence on streaming consumption trends. Buyers project Spotify and Apple Music payout rates forward and discount aggressively.
- Premium for masters that drive sync. A master with master-use fees earns a sync uplift like compositions.
- Discount for masters tied to a single platform (e.g., a Bandcamp-only release with limited distribution).
The master vs publishing valuation gap is one reason artists who own both should value them separately, then sum.
When DIY Estimation Stops
Quick estimation works for catalogs valued below roughly $250,000 and for sellers using the number for personal planning. Beyond that, you need a qualified appraisal for any of these reasons:
- Estate tax filings. Required by IRS for estates above the federal exemption.
- Stepped-up basis documentation. Required to defend basis on sale of inherited catalog.
- Catalog sale negotiation. Buyers expect a third-party-appraised CIM in any institutional process.
- Divorce / equitable distribution. Court-admissible valuation requires a qualified appraiser.
- Loan collateral. Lenders financing catalog acquisitions require appraisal-backed valuation.
- Charitable contribution > $5,000. IRS requires qualified appraisal for music IP donated above this threshold.
Specialty firms include Massarsky Consulting, Citrin Cooperman's Trust & Estate practice, Shot Tower Capital, Provident Music Group, FBMM, and various credentialed solo practitioners. Costs run $5,000 to $25,000 for thorough catalog appraisals; the cost scales with catalog size and complexity.
What Doesn't Drive Value (and Sellers Often Think Does)
- Streaming counts in isolation. 10 million streams that paid $30,000 is worth less than 100,000 streams that paid $40,000 in sync placements.
- Number of songs in the catalog. Quality of earnings beats quantity of titles every time.
- Critical acclaim without commercial earnings. Pitchfork's Best New Track does not move the multiple if the song never earned royalties.
- Songwriter celebrity. Personal fame helps with sync and licensing growth post-acquisition but does not directly inflate the multiple.
- Production quality. A pristine mix earns nothing extra; a song that earns $50,000 a year is worth $50,000 a year regardless of how it was recorded.
The catalog buyer is buying a future income stream, not a memory or an aesthetic experience. Every valuation conversation that drifts away from documented earnings and accepted multiples is a conversation that ends with a lower offer. Bring the data.
How to Increase Your Catalog's Value Before Selling
- Land more sync placements. Each new placement lifts the multiple and the trailing income.
- Clean up administration. Resolve any unsigned splits, fix incorrect PRO registrations, get all songs registered with the MLC.
- Get all foreign sub-publishing collected. Catalogs frequently have uncollected foreign income; capturing it raises the trailing NPS.
- Document sync history thoroughly. A single Excel file listing every placement, fee, term, and trailing royalty closes deals faster and at higher multiples.
- Update streaming metadata. Correct ISRC and ISWC codes on every song; missing or duplicate codes leak income.
- Clean up co-writer disputes. Any unresolved split disagreement caps the multiple a sophisticated buyer will pay.
More Sync Placements Means a Higher Multiple When You Sell
MoveMusic researches music supervisors, library reps, ad agencies, and trailer houses placing music in your genre, then sends individually-personalized pitches on your behalf to lift the catalog's sync trailing.
Pitch My Catalog — From $149Related reading: Selling an Inherited Music Catalog · Selling an Estate Music Catalog · Free Music Valuation