Published on Sep 21, 2024
RouteNote, outside of SoundOn, might be the only music distribution company with a revenue share model where artists aren’t required to pay an upfront fee per release or an annual fee for unlimited. As noted, there’s also SoundOn but the difference between the two, among other things is the KYC requirement. SoundOn requires all users to upload a photo of their State ID and input their ID number to use its service, while RouteNote does not. If KYC is a major deterrent for you but you like the idea of no-fee commitments, then RouteNote might be worth a try.
Unlimited Distribution with a Revenue Share
Unlimited Distribution for a flat annual fee
Free: $0.00 - Keep 85%
Premium: $9.99 per Single | $20 per EP | $30 per Album | $45 per Extended Album + $10 Annually
PayPal: 2.9% Uncapped | ACH: Free
Unlimited inventory
Undisclosed, so we don't know if RouteNote automatically sends your releases to newly added stores.
Includes Unlimited Artists, so there are no caps on the number of artists.
Include - No fee.
Yes, your music stays live if you cancel or can no longer afford to pay. If you have a Premium plan, they'll drop you to the free plan and take 15% of your revenue.
No
Average
Yes - Keep 85% | Premium - Keep 100%
No official policy or plans to allow AI to access artists' music for LLM
Removal + Fine
No
This is promoted as a protective tool and requires you to upload your State ID to verify your identity. The Music Fights Fraud alliance and its members have plans to use this information for their database, which will likely be used for global bans and work as a No-Fly list for music distribution.
No
Included + You can bring your own
Check the Comparison Charts for the most updated and comprehensive information
Transparency: Great. Customer support: Ok. Payment: Great - you can avoid transaction fees by having payouts sent directly to your bank account. Stores: Great - extensive library of stores. Features: Decent. Longevity: Great. Fees: Great. Red Flags: None. Track Record: Solid.
RouteNote, it's free, and that's the best thing about it. There isn't anything that separates RouteNote from every other distributor beyond the fact that it's free. At the same time, there isn't anything that separates RouteNote from every other digital distributor. They get you into just as many stores as the distributors with the largest inventory of stores, and collect and disburse payments just as they do. In some sense, it's better because you can avoid transaction fees by choosing Direct Deposit, which not all distributors allow you to do. It lacks the features you'd find with Tunecore and Distrokid, the community you'd find with Venice, and the tools you'd find with Landr, but maybe you're not looking for all of that. Those platforms charge annual fees, extra fees for extra services, and, excluding Landr, will remove your music if you cancel or can no longer afford to pay.