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๐Ÿ’ฐ How to Get Paid for Live Performances with BMI & ASCAP

Most artists think the only way to get paid for a show is if the promoter cuts them a check. What they donโ€™t realize is that every time they perform their own music live, BMI and ASCAP owe them royalties.

This applies to open mics, showcases, small venues, and big stages. If the venue has a music license, your setlist can earn you money. Letโ€™s break it all the way down.

๐ŸŽถ Why You Get Paid for Performing Your Own Music

Every time your song is performed in public, it counts as a public performance. Venues (bars, lounges, clubs, even coffee shops) pay license fees to BMI and ASCAP so they can legally host live music. Because of this license, you โ€” the songwriter/artist โ€” can collect royalties when you perform your registered music.

โœ… What You Need First

Before you can collect, make sure you:

Join a PRO (Performance Rights Organization) โ€” either BMI or ASCAP.

Register every original song you release with your PRO.

Keep records of your performances (flyers, contracts, setlists).

Without registered songs, thereโ€™s nothing for them to pay you on.

๐ŸŽค How to Report Your Shows

BMI Live

Log into your BMI account. Go to the BMI Live portal. Enter the date, venue name, and your setlist (the original songs you performed). Submit within 6 months of the performance.

ASCAP OnStage

Log into your ASCAP account. Go to the OnStage program. Enter the same details: venue, date, and original songs. ASCAP also accepts reports for small gigs โ€” no performance is too small.

๐Ÿ’ธ How Much Can You Make?

Payouts depend on the venueโ€™s license size, audience reach, and the number of times you report. Payments might start small ($10โ€“$150 per gig), but if you perform consistently, they add up every quarter. The larger the stage, the bigger the check.

โš ๏ธ Common Mistakes Artists Make

Performing unregistered songs.

Forgetting to submit their setlists.

Assuming small shows donโ€™t count.

Missing reporting deadlines.

Every missed report = lost royalties.

๐Ÿ”‘ Pro Tip: Stack Multiple Income Streams

While you collect your BMI/ASCAP royalties, you can also:

Charge performance fees from promoters. Sell merch and digital products at shows. Collect SoundExchange royalties if your performance is broadcast online or on radio.

This way, each show pays you in multiple ways.

๐Ÿ“ Final Word from PaySos

If youโ€™re an artist, donโ€™t just perform for the love โ€” perform for the bag.

Register your music, report your shows, and build a routine where every gig turns into royalties.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Follow me on IG @iamkingpaysos

๐Ÿ‘‰ Tap into my blog: Kingpaysos.blog

Donโ€™t leave money on the table. Get your performance royalties.

Related Reads:

Before You Sign: Royalty Checklist

You Ainโ€™t Broke, You Just Donโ€™t Know Where the Money Lives

Intellectual Property for Artists


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