An Indie Music Producer’s Guide to Registering Their Songs with IPRS

An Indie Music Producer’s Guide to Registering Their Songs with IPRS


You’ve spent hours writing, producing, and polishing your track.

It’s ready to release.

But here’s the question are you ready to get paid when it’s streamed, played on radio, or performed live?

If you’re an indie music producer in India, one of the smartest moves you can make is registering your songs with IPRS.

In this guide, we’ll cover:

  1. What IPRS is and why it matters
  2. Who can become a member
  3. Step-by-step process to register your songs
  4. Common mistakes indie artists make
  5. Pro tips to protect your royalties

Let’s break it down.


What Is IPRS?


IPRS stands for the Indian Performing Right Society India’s official copyright society for music composers, lyricists, and publishers.

In simple terms:

If your music gets played anywhere radio, TV, live shows, streaming platforms, restaurants, clubs, or events — IPRS collects royalties on your behalf and pays you.

It’s like having a watchful friend making sure you get paid for every public use of your music.


Why Should Indie Music Producers Join IPRS?


If you produce and release music without IPRS, you might be leaving money on the table.

Here’s why membership is essential:

  1. Earn performance royalties when your music is played publicly
  2. Protect your work against unauthorized use
  3. Global collection network through partnerships with other rights organizations
  4. Credibility IPRS membership shows industry professionalism

Think of it as locking the door to your house and setting up a security system.


Who Can Become an IPRS Member?


IPRS membership is open to:

  1. Music composers (you write melodies)
  2. Lyricists (you write words)
  3. Publishers (you own the rights to music)

If you’re an indie music producer, you can qualify as a composer if you create original melodies, or as a publisher if you own rights to the master recordings.


How to Register Your Songs with IPRS (Step-by-Step)


1. Apply for Membership


  1. Visit the official IPRS Website
  2. Fill out the application form with your personal and professional details
  3. Submit required documents (ID proof, PAN, passport-size photo, signature)
  4. Pay the membership fee

Tip: Choose the correct category (Composer, Lyricist, Publisher) you can hold more than one role if applicable.


2. Get Your Membership Approved


After verification, IPRS will issue you a membership number and access to their online portal.


3. Register Your Songs


  1. Log into the IPRS Member Portal
  2. Go to Work Registration
  3. Enter details: song title, composer(s), lyricist(s), publisher, duration, release date
  4. Upload proof of ownership (optional but recommended)

4. Update Your Catalogue


Any new song you release must be registered immediately to ensure royalties are tracked from day one.


Common Mistakes Indie Producers Make


  1. Not registering all collaborators: If you co-wrote the track, split credits accurately
  2. Delaying registration: The longer you wait, the more royalties you may lose
  3. Confusing IPRS with PPL: IPRS collects royalties for composers/lyricists/publishers, while PPL handles royalties for sound recording owners (labels, producers)
  4. Not registering instrumentals: Even without lyrics, your composition still earns royalties

Pro Tips to Maximize Your Royalties


  1. Keep a spreadsheet of all your releases with dates, credits, and registration numbers
  2. Use ISRC codes for each recording this helps track plays globally
  3. Double-check metadata before submission
  4. Perform live? Submit setlists to IPRS after each gig to claim live performance royalties

Final Thoughts


As an indie music producer, your creativity is your currency.

Registering with IPRS ensures you don’t just release songs you earn from them for years to come.

If you’re serious about your career, make IPRS registration as important as the mix and master.


Learn the Business Side of Music


At Lost Stories Academy, we teach not just music production and mixing, but also music business essentials like copyright, publishing, and royalty collection.

Join our Music Business, Music Marketing & Artist Development Modules to learn how to protect, promote, and profit from your music.

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