TV show (per episode use) · Sync Licensing
TV Sync Licensing Fees
TV is the workhorse of sync. Per-episode upfront fees vary widely with the network and budget, but the real prize is often the backend: every broadcast and stream of that episode generates performance royalties through your PRO, so a single placement can keep paying for years.
TV show (per episode use) sync fee at a glance
For licensing one song into a single tv show (per episode use) project, widely-reported upfront fees fall in this range:
| Usage | Upfront fee range | Backend (performance royalties) |
|---|---|---|
| TV show (per episode use) | $500 – $25,000 | TV is often where the real money is: every broadcast/stream generates performance royalties through your PRO. |
Upfront range: Widely-reported sync upfront-fee ranges; every placement is negotiated individually · as of 2026 · [verify]
Upfront vs. backend for this placement
The upfront fee is the one-time payment to license the master and composition into the project. The backend is the performance royalties collected through your PRO whenever the placement airs. For tv show (per episode use): TV is often where the real money is: every broadcast/stream generates performance royalties through your PRO. Because backend depends on how widely and how often a placement is used, we describe it rather than fabricating a number.
How exclusivity and territory change it
An exclusive license — locking the song from competitors — typically commands a 1.5–3× premium. Clearing worldwide rights instead of one territory typically runs 1.5–2.5× a single-territory deal. Toggle both in the calculator above to see them compound. These are modeling assumptions, flagged [verify].
Sync fees are negotiated individually; treat every figure here as a ballpark, not a quote. [verify]
Sync platforms to consider
Marketplaces, libraries, and agencies that pitch music for tv show (per episode use) and other placements. Links marked Informational are not paid partnerships.
Boutique sync agency and music house.
Affiliate disclosure: some outbound links may earn us a commission at no cost to you.
TV show (per episode use) sync licensing FAQ
How much does a tv show (per episode use) sync placement pay?
Widely-reported upfront fees for a tv show (per episode use) placement land in the $500 – $25,000 range for licensing one song into one project. It’s a wide band because every deal is negotiated individually, driven by budget, the prominence of the placement, and the artist’s profile.
What backend does a tv show (per episode use) placement generate?
TV is often where the real money is: every broadcast/stream generates performance royalties through your PRO.
How do exclusivity and worldwide rights change the fee?
An exclusive license typically commands a 1.5–3× premium, and clearing worldwide rights instead of a single territory typically runs 1.5–2.5×. When both apply they compound. These are modeling assumptions, flagged for verification.
Is this fee guaranteed?
No. Sync fees are negotiated per deal and vary enormously. Treat the ranges as a ballpark for understanding order of magnitude, not as a quote.
How do I land this kind of placement?
Most independent artists work through sync agencies, licensing marketplaces, or music libraries that pitch catalogs to music supervisors. See the platforms listed below — they’re informational references unless labeled as partners.
Keep going
- All-usage sync licensing calculator
- Publishing royalty calculator — collect the backend a placement generates.
- Streaming royalty calculator — turn streams into estimated earnings.
- Catalog valuation calculator — sync demand can lift catalog value.
- Guides — how sync deals work.
Estimates are for informational purposes only and are not financial, investment, tax, or legal advice. Actual offers and figures vary by provider, contract terms, and current market conditions.