2026-04630RuleWallet

College Webcasters' Digital Music Payments Set for Next Five Years

Published Date: 3/10/2026

Rule

Summary

Starting January 1, 2026, noncommercial educational webcasters will follow new rules for paying to play music online, lasting through 2030. These updated rates and terms come from a deal between music rights groups and college broadcasters, making sure artists get fair pay while schools keep streaming. The changes kick in on March 10, 2026, so webcasters should get ready to follow the new payment rules.

Analyzed Economic Effects

5 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 3 costs, 1 mixed.

Per‑channel Minimum Fee Schedule

If you run a noncommercial educational webcaster, you must pay an annual Minimum Fee for each individual channel or station that makes Educational Transmissions. The Minimum Fee is $800 for 2026, $850 for 2027, $900 for 2028, $950 for 2029, and $1,000 for 2030.

160,000 ATH Cap and Penalties

A webcaster that uses the Minimum Fee option must not make total transmissions over 160,000 Aggregate Tuning Hours (ATH) on any individual channel in a month (based on prior-year and expected usage rules). If a webcaster unexpectedly exceeds 160,000 ATH on a channel in any month, it must notify the Collective within 30 days, pay royalties under subpart B for that month and the remainder of the calendar year, and the Minimum Fee already paid will be credited against amounts owed.

Optional $100 Proxy Fee To Skip Reports

A Noncommercial Educational Webcaster that did not exceed 80,000 Aggregate Tuning Hours (ATH) for any channel in the prior year and does not expect to exceed 80,000 ATH in any month may pay a $100 annual Proxy Fee instead of submitting regular reports of use. The Proxy Fee must be paid by January 31 each year (or within 30 days after the month you begin transmissions if you start after January 31).

Reporting Options, Deadlines, and Account Forms

Webcasters must submit the Minimum Fee (and Proxy Fee if used) with a statement of account by January 31 each year (or within 30 days after the month they begin transmissions if starting after January 31). Eligible webcasters may elect sample‑basis reporting (two weeks per quarter) or must provide quarterly census reports if they exceed thresholds; sample reports are due by January 31 of the following year and census reports are due within 30 days after each quarter. Statements of account must include specified contact and certification information and a signed certification that the licensee qualifies and met ATH limits.

Who Qualifies as an Educational Webcaster

A "Noncommercial Educational Webcaster" must hold the compulsory licenses under 17 U.S.C. 112(e) and 114, comply with applicable provisions, be operated by or affiliated with a domestically accredited primary/secondary or degree‑granting institution and be staffed substantially by enrolled students, and must not be a public broadcasting entity eligible for Corporation for Public Broadcasting funding. These criteria determine whether an operation may use the Educational Webcaster rules and fees.

Your PRIA Score

Score Hidden

Personalized for You

How does this regulation affect your finances?

Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.

Free to start

Key Dates

Published Date
Rule Effective
3/10/2026
3/10/2026

Department and Agencies

Department
Independent Agency
Agency
Library of Congress
Copyright Royalty Board
Source: View HTML

Related Federal Register Documents

Previous / Next Documents

Back to Federal Register

Take It Personal

Get Your Personalized Policy View

Start a Free Government Policy Watch to see how policy affects your household, then upgrade to PRIA Full Coverage for year-round monitoring.

Already have an account? Sign in