TuneCore was one of the first independent music distributors and helped thousands of artists get their music on Spotify and Apple Music. But the music distribution landscape has changed dramatically, and TuneCore's pricing model, which charges annual fees per release, is no longer the best deal for most artists.
If you have 10 singles and 2 albums on TuneCore, you are paying over $150 per year just to keep your catalog online. Stop paying and your music gets removed. Here are 7 alternatives that offer better terms, lower costs, or more features.
Why Artists Leave TuneCore
The core issue is compounding annual fees. Each single costs $9.99/year and each album costs $29.99/year. For a productive artist releasing monthly, annual costs quickly exceed $120 just for singles. Competitors like DistroKid offer unlimited uploads for a flat $22.99/year. The math is hard to justify unless you specifically need TuneCore's publishing administration features.
1. DistroKid (Best Overall Alternative)
DistroKid charges $22.99/year for unlimited uploads with 100% royalties. It delivers to 150+ stores, usually within 1 to 2 business days. Features include Spotify for Artists access, hyperfollow pages, automatic YouTube Content ID, and daily royalty stats. The main trade-off: if you stop paying, your music comes down (same as TuneCore, but at a fraction of the cost).

Best for: prolific artists who release often and want the lowest annual cost.
2. CD Baby (Best for No Annual Fees)
CD Baby uses a one-time payment model: $9.95 per single, $29.95 per album. Your music stays up forever with no renewal fees. The catch is a 9% commission on royalties (15% on the Pro tier, which adds publishing royalty collection). CD Baby also offers physical distribution to retail stores, which is unique among digital distributors.
Best for: artists who want a "pay once, keep forever" model and do not mind a small royalty commission.
3. Amuse (Best Free Option)
Amuse offers a genuinely free tier with 0% commission and delivery to all major platforms. The trade-offs on free are slower delivery times (up to several weeks) and limited features. Their paid Pro tier ($24.99/year) matches DistroKid's speed with additional analytics and support. Amuse also offers advance funding for qualifying artists based on streaming performance.

Best for: beginners testing the waters or artists who want zero-cost distribution.
4. Ditto Music (Best for UK Artists)
Ditto charges $19/year for unlimited uploads with 0% commission. Based in Liverpool, they have strong ties to the UK music industry and offer record label services for artists who are ready to scale. Their advance funding program and playlist pitching tools are competitive additions. Customer support response times have been hit-or-miss according to user reviews.
Best for: UK-based artists or those interested in label services alongside distribution.
5. United Masters (Best for Brand Deals)
United Masters has a free tier (10% commission) and a Select tier at $5/month (0% commission). What sets them apart is their brand partnership program: they have deals with Apple, the NBA, TikTok, and other major brands that connect artists with placement opportunities. The platform is particularly strong in hip-hop and R&B.

Best for: hip-hop and R&B artists who want brand partnership opportunities built into their distribution.
6. LANDR (Best for Producers)
LANDR bundles distribution with AI mastering, a samples library, and plugins starting at $12.99/month. If you already need mastering and production tools, the bundle makes sense financially. As a standalone distributor, it is overpriced compared to DistroKid or Ditto. Distribution features are basic but functional.
Best for: home studio producers who need mastering, samples, and distribution in one subscription.
7. RouteNote (Best Hybrid Model)
RouteNote offers two tracks: a free tier (15% commission) and a premium tier ($9.99 per release, 0% commission). The free tier is genuinely unlimited with no catches other than the commission. They also offer Content ID for YouTube and sync licensing opportunities. Delivery times are reasonable at 3 to 5 business days.
Best for: artists who want the flexibility to choose between free (with commission) or paid (without commission) on a per-release basis.
Switching distributors is easier than you think. Most platforms allow you to transfer your existing catalog without losing your streaming history or playlist placements. Check with your new distributor's support team for specific migration instructions.
Distribution Is Only the First Step
Getting your music on streaming platforms is the minimum. The real challenge is getting people to listen. That is where marketing tools come in: smart links to track where fans listen, playlist pitching to get on curated playlists, and promotion tools to reach new audiences. Your distributor handles delivery; your marketing handles discovery.
As of May 2026, NotNoise is also a distributor. Distribution is bundled into the Pro plan ($9/mo) with 100% royalty pass-through, no per-release renewal fees (the thing that pushes most artists off TuneCore in the first place), and the marketing layer sits in the same subscription: Smart Links, Meta ads, playlist pitching, analytics. See our flagship guide on music distribution for the full comparison.
Update May 2026: NotNoise launched distribution
Since this article was first published, the math changed. NotNoise launched its own music distribution in May 2026, bundled inside the Pro plan at $9/mo (and the Max plan at $19/mo) rather than sold as a standalone product. It delivers to 150+ stores via Revelator, keeps you on 100% of streaming royalties, and has no per-release renewal fees. What is different is what it is bundled with: Smart Links, Meta ad campaigns, playlist pitching to a vetted curator network, and cross-platform analytics, all inside the same subscription. For any artist already paying for a Smart Link tool plus a separate distributor, the math collapses into one product. For the broader 2026 distribution decision, read our flagship guide.
Two honest caveats. NotNoise distribution is plan-bound, so cancellation queues a release takedown at the end of your current billing period (with immediate, seven-day-before, and one-day-before warnings, plus email notifications). And the product is new (four weeks live at the time of this update), so a catalog artist with high-stakes releases should test it on the next single before moving the whole catalog. Pro and Max plans support one artist; the Team plan supports multiple.

