TIDAL Will Stream Your AI Music – But It Won’t Pay for It

TIDAL’s June 29 policy lets AI-generated tracks remain on the platform but blocks all royalty payments to distributors who upload them

Annemarije de Boer Avatar
Annemarije de Boer Avatar

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Image: Tidal

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • TIDAL blocks royalty payments for wholly AI-generated tracks effective June 29, 2025.
  • Distributors must disclose AI content before upload or face enforcement on TIDAL’s platform.
  • Unlike Spotify and Apple Music, TIDAL draws the sharpest economic boundary against AI music payouts.

Roughly 75,000 fully AI-generated tracks hit Deezer alone every day — about 44% of all new music delivered to that platform, according to the company’s own disclosures. Up to 85% of streams on those tracks were fraudulent in 2025. Spotify scrubbed 75 million “spammy” tracks over the past year. The streaming economy built for human musicians is drowning in algorithmic output — and the payout systems designed for artists are taking the hit.

TIDAL just dropped a formal response. As of June 29, wholly AI-generated music on the Block-owned platform can still exist — but it earns zero royalties. The tracks stay up. The checks don’t come.

What the Policy Actually Does

Three enforcement layers roll out across two dates, with distributors on the hook for pre-upload disclosure.

The mechanics break down cleanly:

  • Royalty blocking on wholly AI-generated tracks — effective June 29
  • Consumer-facing “AI” badges and removal of fraudulent content (artist impersonations, streaming manipulation schemes) — rolling out July 15
  • Distributors must flag AI content before upload or face enforcement
  • TIDAL’s Upload tool for independents blocks AI-generated tracks from direct-to-fan sales entirely

The tricky part: TIDAL hasn’t defined a hard threshold between “wholly” and “substantially” AI-generated. Hybrid tracks where humans compose, perform, or heavily guide AI tools may still qualify for royalties. Detection will sharpen over time, and tagging will expand to “substantially” AI-generated music — but the exact line stays blurry for now. TIDAL calls the policy “a living document,” which is honest shorthand for “details are still being worked out.”

“AI’s takeover of the music industry (and your recommendations) isn’t inevitable if we take even greater steps now to monitor and control it.” — Tony Gervino, TIDAL EVP & Editor-in-Chief

A Different Lane on a Crowded Highway

Every major streaming platform has drawn a different line on AI music — TIDAL’s is the sharpest economic boundary yet.

PlatformApproach
BandcampFull prohibition — no AI-generated music, period
SpotifyPays out on AI tracks but fights spam and impersonation separately
Apple MusicDelegates disclosure entirely to labels
DeezerTags and strips fraudulent streams
TIDALAI music allowed but earns zero royalties; uploaded music won’t train generative AI models

The unresolved question hanging over all of this is whether “allowed but unpaid” survives contact with evolving copyright frameworks. WIPO is already asking who gets compensated when a model trained on human music generates a track. As tools from platforms like Suno grow more sophisticated and legal precedent catches up, that question gets harder to sidestep. TIDAL’s answer, for now, is clean and blunt — nobody.

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