✅ 1. The 1,000 Stream Rule: Your Track Must Earn It
As of April 2024, Spotify only pays royalties to tracks that receive at least 1,000 streams within the past 12 months.
That means:
- If your track crosses 1,000 streams by January 2025, it becomes eligible for payment in that month.
- If your streams fall below 1,000 in any rolling 12-month window, Spotify will stop paying until the track hits that threshold again.
📅 This is reviewed monthly, based on a rolling 12-month window.
⏱️ 2. Streams Must Be Over 30 Seconds
Spotify only counts a stream (and pays for it) if a listener plays at least 30 seconds of your track. If the listener skips before the 30-second mark, the play doesn’t count toward monetization.
🌍 3. Country and Account Type Matter
Not all streams are created equal. What you earn depends on:
- Where your listeners are located: A stream in the U.S. or Germany pays more than one in India or the Philippines.
- Whether the listener is a Premium user or Free: Premium subscriptions generate higher revenue per stream than ad-supported users.
📊 4. No Fixed Rate Per Stream: Spotify Uses “Stream Share”
Spotify doesn’t pay a flat amount per stream. Instead, it uses a stream share model:
- Spotify collects total revenue (from subscriptions + ads)
- Then it calculates the percentage of all streams your track represents
- You get paid that percentage of the revenue pool
🎯 Example: If your music represents 0.01% of all streams that month, you receive 0.01% of the payout pool.
💼 5. Who Actually Gets Paid?
Spotify doesn’t pay artists directly. Instead, royalties go to:
- Your digital distributor (e.g., DistroKid, TuneCore, CD Baby)
- Or your record label if you’re signed
From there, the label/distributor pays you based on your contract with them.
💰 6. How Much Does Spotify Pay Per Stream?
There’s no universal rate, but here are estimated averages for 2025:
Stream Type | Estimated Payout |
---|---|
Premium (US/EU) | $0.003 – $0.005 |
Free/Ad-supported | $0.001 – $0.002 |
Low-income countries | <$0.001 |
On average, 1,000 streams = $2–$5, depending on your audience location and account type.
🔄 7. Can a Track Lose & Regain Eligibility?
Yes. If a track drops below 1,000 streams in the past 12 months, it stops earning. But if it rebounds and passes 1,000 again, it resumes monetization from that month forward.
Spotify checks this status every month, so consistent performance matters.
🧠 How to Keep Your Music Monetized on Spotify
- 🔁 Promote your older tracks regularly
- 📈 Use Spotify for Artists to track streaming trends
- 📣 Encourage fans to listen from Premium accounts
- 🎯 Target playlists and regions with higher payout rates
📋 Summary Table
Requirement | Rule |
---|---|
Minimum streams | 1,000 in the last 12 months |
Minimum stream duration | 30 seconds |
Listener type | Premium > Free |
Listener location | Affects payout amount |
Stream payout model | Stream share model |
Payout recipient | Label or distributor, not artist directly |
Payout suspension possible? | Yes, if below 1,000 streams |
🧾 Final Thoughts
Spotify’s updated monetization model rewards consistency and engagement. To maximize your earnings:
- Hit the 1,000-stream mark (and keep it)
- Understand your audience
- Work with a reliable distributor
- Keep your promotion going even after release day
Need help tracking your monetized tracks or want a Google Sheet to calculate your monthly eligibility? I can build you a custom tracker—just ask!