American Music Fairness Act

Why AM/FM Radio Must Pay Music Creators

Key facts

Status

Active in 199th Congress

Annual cost to U.S. artists

$200M+ in lost overseas royalties

Small broadcaster protection

As low as $10/year

Countries without performance right

U.S., China, North Korea, Iran

Related legislation

Music Modernization Act (2018)

Traditional AM/FM radio broadcasts music to generate billions in advertising revenue, yet it is the only major music platform in the United States that does not compensate performers and producers for using their sound recordings. Internet radio, satellite radio, cable radio, and streaming services all pay royalties to artists. Terrestrial radio does not.

This disparity costs American artists more than $200 million annually in overseas royalties alone, because most other countries will not pay U.S. artists when their music is played abroad since the U.S. does not recognize a reciprocal performance right.

The American Music Fairness Act would create parity across all music platforms, requiring AM/FM broadcasters to compensate artists at fair market rates. The bill includes protections for small and community broadcasters, with special exemptions that allow qualifying stations to pay as little as $10 per year.

What the Bill Does

AMFA establishes a public performance right for sound recordings on terrestrial radio, meaning artists would be compensated whenever their music is broadcast on AM/FM. It also unlocks hundreds of millions of dollars in overseas royalties that are currently collected but never paid to American artists.

What the Bill Does

In December 2025, rock icon Gene Simmons testified before the U.S. Senate in support of the American Music Fairness Act, calling the current system an injustice against music creators. The bill has strong bipartisan support and continues to gain co-sponsors in both chambers of Congress.

Gene Simmons testifies before the U.S. Senate on the American Music Fairness Act, December 2025

Legislative Timeline

  1. December 2025

    Senate Hearing with Gene Simmons

    Rock icon Gene Simmons testified before the U.S. Senate, declaring it time to end the injustice of unpaid radio royalties for performers and producers.

  2. June 2021

    What the Bill Does

    Reps. Ted Deutch and Darrell Issa introduced the bipartisan AMFA in the House of Representatives, building on decades of advocacy for a terrestrial performance right.

  3. October 2018

    Music Modernization Act Signed into Law

    Landmark legislation modernizing music licensing, establishing the mechanical licensing collective, and recognizing producers in copyright law for the first time.

  4. 2014

    Music Advocacy Day Launches

    The Academy launches its nationwide grassroots lobbying campaign, bringing music creators to the local offices of elected officials in their home districts.

  5. 2004

    Recording Academy D.C. Office Opens

    The Academy establishes its Advocacy & Public Policy office in Washington, D.C., creating a permanent presence to represent music creators on Capitol Hill.

Why Advocacy Matters to Creators

My song plays on the radio hundreds of times a week. I get paid by streaming, by satellite, by internet radio. AM/FM? Nothing. That's not right.
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Tássia Assis

“Going to Capitol Hill and sitting across from my senator, explaining how AI deepfakes threaten my voice and my livelihood, that changed everything for me.”
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Tássia Assis

“The AMP Act meant that for the first time in history, my work as a producer was recognized in copyright law. That happened because Academy members showed up.”
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Tássia Assis

Tell Congress to Support AMFA

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