Overview: Music Artists with a US LLC
A US LLC helps music artists collect royalties from US-based platforms (Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music), labels, and publishers. It also provides liability protection and enables opening accounts with US distributors like DistroKid, TuneCore, and CD Baby.
Best Business Structure
For music artists, we recommend: Single-Member LLC (Disregarded Entity)
A US LLC helps music artists collect royalties from US-based platforms (Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music), labels, and publishers. It also provides liability protection and enables opening accounts with US distributors like DistroKid, TuneCore, and CD Baby.
Tax Considerations for Music Artists
Music royalties from US sources are subject to 30% withholding without proper documentation. There are multiple types of music royalties (mechanical, performance, synchronization, master use) and each may have different withholding rules. Performance royalties collected through US PROs (ASCAP, BMI, SESAC) are also subject to withholding.
Important Note for Music Artists
Music royalties have complex sourcing rules. Generally, performance royalties are sourced to where the music is performed/streamed. Mechanical royalties are sourced to where the reproduction occurs. For streaming platforms like Spotify, the royalties from US listeners are US-source, while royalties from non-US listeners are foreign-source. Many distributors only withhold on the US-source portion of royalties.
Required Tax Forms
As a non-resident music artist with a US LLC, you'll typically need these forms:
- Form 5472 + Pro Forma 1120 (required annually)
- Form W-8BEN (for distributors, labels, PROs, and platforms)
- Form 1042-S (from entities withholding tax)
- Form 1040-NR (to claim refund or report income)
- Form W-7 (ITIN application)
Key Filing Deadline
Form 5472 + Pro Forma 1120: Due April 15 (extension available to October 15). Penalty for non-filing: $25,000. This applies even if your LLC had zero income.
Common Deductions for Music Artists
These business expenses are typically deductible for music artists operating through a US LLC:
- Recording studio fees
- Musical instruments and equipment
- Music production software (DAW, plugins)
- Mixing and mastering services
- Album artwork and design
- Music distributor fees (DistroKid, TuneCore)
- Music video production costs
- Marketing and promotion expenses
- Touring and travel expenses
- Streaming promotion costs
Tips for Tax Compliance
- Submit W-8BEN to all distributors and PROs
- Register with a US PRO (ASCAP or BMI) for performance royalties
- Track royalties by type (mechanical, performance, sync, master)
- Understand which royalties are US-source vs foreign-source
- Consider whether live performance income in the US is ECI
- Register with SoundExchange for digital performance royalties
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