If you’re a Ghanaian musician and you’re not signed up to any royalty collection agency, you’re leaving money on the table. Every time your song plays on TV, radio, or at a public event — you’re supposed to earn something.
In this guide, we break down how to legally collect royalties in Ghana, who to register with, and how to get started in 2025.
🎵 What Are Music Royalties?
Royalties are payments made to artists, songwriters, and producers whenever their music is used, performed, broadcast, or reproduced.
In Ghana, most music royalties come from:
* 📻 Radio and TV plays
* 🕺 Live performances
* 📀 Song downloads and streams
* 🎬 Syncing music to ads, movies, or shows
* 📣 Public events or DJ spins
Royalty Collection Bodies in Ghana
1. GHAMRO (Ghana Music Rights Organization)
GHAMRO is Ghana’s official body for collecting and distributing royalties for composers, songwriters, and music publishers.
✅ What You Get:
* Royalties from radio/TV/public plays
* Support for copyright infringement cases
* Local & international royalty payouts (through partnerships)
📝 How to Register:
* Fill a registration form at GHAMRO’s office or website
* Provide valid ID + passport picture
* Pay a one-time registration fee (around GH₵ 100–150)
🔗 Website: ghamro.org
📍 Main Office: Accra, adjacent to Ridge Hospital
2. ARSOG (Audiovisual Rights Society of Ghana)
If your music appears in films, series, or TV shows, ARSOG helps collect audiovisual performance royalties.
This applies to:
* Artists featured in music videos used in movies
* Songs synced to TV series
* Film scoring or background music
🔎 Still growing, but important if you’re pushing visuals or scoring gigs.
3. CopyGhana
While not for musicians directly, CopyGhana collects royalties from public photocopying, digital copying, and reproduction — mostly helpful if your lyrics, content, or compositions are used in publications or books.
💰 International Royalties – Don’t Miss Out!
Ghanaian artists who upload music to streaming platforms may also earn foreign royalties if they’re registered with:
* BMI, ASCAP (U.S.)
* PRS (UK)
* SACEM (France)
GHAMRO has agreements with some of these bodies — but it’s smart to register directly if your fanbase is outside Ghana.
🧾 What You’ll Need to Register:
* Valid ID (Ghana Card, Passport, etc.)
* Two passport-sized photos
* Proof of ownership (your songs, lyrics, release links)
* Registration fee (varies by body)
🕓 How Often Are Royalties Paid in Ghana?
* GHAMRO: At least once or twice a year
* ARSOG: Varies based on usage
* Streaming royalties: Monthly via distributor (TuneCore, DistroKid, Ditto, etc.)
🎧 Note: Payments may be small at first, but they grow as your songs get more airplay or usage.
❗Common Mistakes to Avoid:
* Not registering at all
* Using beats without owning rights
* Failing to submit song logs to GHAMRO
* Not uploading full metadata when releasing music
📌 Final Words
Royalty collection in Ghana is far from perfect, but it’s still real money. As an artist, treating your music like a business starts with registering your works and claiming what’s yours.
Don’t wait till you blow — start now.
CHECK THIS: How to Build a Loyal Fanbase as an Upcoming Artist in Ghana
source: kaknews.com