FRL

CD Baby vs Ditto Music: which should an independent artist pick?

Both get your music on every major platform and both let you keep your masters — the difference is the money model: CD Baby is per-release fee, Ditto Music is annual subscription. Which wins depends on how often you release and how long your catalog earns.

 CD BabyDitto Music
ModelPer-release feeAnnual subscription
Pricing$9.99/single, $14.99/album one-time, no annual fees (as of June 2026)From $19/yr (Starter); see current pricing on their site for Pro and Label tiers
Payout91% of digital distribution revenue (CD Baby keeps 9%)100% of royalties
You keep mastersYesYes
Best forArtists who release infrequently and want music to stay live forever without recurring subscription fees.Artists and small labels who want cheap unlimited distribution with 0% commission and label-management tools.

Pick CD Baby if…

Artists who release infrequently and want music to stay live forever without recurring subscription fees.

But watch out

  • Permanent 9% commission on all digital distribution revenue for the life of the release, per CD Baby's own pricing page.
  • Now owned by Universal Music Group following UMG's $775M acquisition of parent Downtown Music Holdings (completed February 2026) — a consideration for artists specifically avoiding major-label ecosystems.

Full CD Baby profile →

Pick Ditto Music if…

Artists and small labels who want cheap unlimited distribution with 0% commission and label-management tools.

But watch out

  • Release Protection is a Pro-tier feature — on the entry Starter plan, keeping music live depends on maintaining your subscription.
  • Features like YouTube Content ID, timed releases, sync pitching, publishing royalty collection, and priority support all require upgrading beyond the $19 Starter plan.

Full Ditto Music profile →

The decision in one rule

Run your release pace against the models: a subscription distributor is cheapest per release if you put out music constantly (but your music typically comes down if you stop paying), while a one-time fee or commission model favors a small catalog that earns for years. Whatever you choose, confirm you can leave with your catalog and that you keep the masters — the non-negotiables covered in how to release independently. Then run your numbers in the royalty calculator.

Primary sources

  1. [1]How Much Does CD Baby Cost? Transparent Pricing GuideCD Baby
  2. [2]UMG's $775 Million Downtown Acquisition Gets Final EU ApprovalBillboard
  3. [3]Universal Music's Downtown acquisition cleared by EU competition regulatorMusic Business Worldwide
  4. [4]Pricing | Ditto MusicDitto Music
  5. [5]How much does music distribution cost with Ditto?Ditto Music Support
  6. [6]Ditto Music distributor: the complete guide for independent artists in 2026TheBestMusicDistributors.com

Educational comparison, not an endorsement or affiliate content. Details verified against official pages as of June 2026 — terms change, confirm before signing up.