Last reviewed: 3 July 2026 · This article provides general legal guidance. It is not a substitute for professional advice tailored to your situation.
Any business that plays, streams or embeds music within Germany must understand how to license music in Germany, or risk enforcement action from the country’s powerful collecting societies. Germany’s copyright framework, anchored in the Urheberrechtsgesetz (UrhG), grants automatic protection to musical works and sound recordings without any registration requirement, meaning virtually every track a café speaker or social-media campaign touches is protected. Two collecting societies dominate the landscape, GEMA (representing authors, composers and publishers) and GVL (representing performers and phonogram producers), yet neither covers every right a business needs.
With EU Digital Single Market Directive provisions now fully embedded in national law and enforcement budgets growing, music licensing for businesses in Germany has never demanded more careful attention than it does in 2026.
Before contacting any organisation, you need to identify which rights your intended use engages. German copyright law distinguishes three layers of rights in a single piece of recorded music, each controlled by a different party and often licensed through a different channel.
| Right | Who Controls It | Typical Licensing Route |
|---|---|---|
| Musical composition (melody & lyrics) | Composer & publisher, rights often assigned to GEMA members | GEMA licence for public performance & mechanical reproduction; direct publisher negotiation for synchronization |
| Sound recording (master) | Label or recording owner (phonogram producer) | Direct licence with the label for sync & mechanical uses; GVL collects statutory remuneration for neighbouring-rights uses |
| Performers’ neighbouring rights | Performing artists (often represented collectively) | GVL collection and distribution; labels may also handle master licensing on performers’ behalf |
Under the UrhG, copyright protection is automatic from the moment a work is created. There is no registration office and no formality requirement. This means the default legal position is that all music is protected unless it has entered the public domain, which in Germany occurs 70 years after the death of the last surviving author (§ 64 UrhG). Even works released under Creative Commons or labelled “royalty‑free” may still carry neighbouring-rights obligations towards performers and producers.
One of the most common compliance errors is assuming that a single payment covers every right. GEMA and GVL serve fundamentally different rights-holder groups, and many business uses trigger obligations to both organisations simultaneously.
GEMA (Gesellschaft für musikalische Aufführungs- und mechanische Vervielfältigungsrechte) administers the rights of composers, lyricists and music publishers. When you play a song in a venue, stream it on a website or reproduce it on a physical medium, GEMA is the body that licences the underlying musical composition. GEMA operates under a system of published tariff schedules, grouped by use-case, and issues blanket licences that cover its entire repertoire. Businesses can verify whether a specific track falls within the GEMA repertoire through the organisation’s online works database.
GVL (Gesellschaft zur Verwertung von Leistungsschutzrechten) collects and distributes remuneration for performers and phonogram producers. Where the UrhG grants a statutory right to equitable remuneration, for example when a commercially released recording is publicly performed or broadcast, GVL is the designated collecting society. A venue playing recorded music therefore typically needs both a GEMA licence (for the composition) and a GVL obligation (for the recording and performance). GVL tariffs are often invoiced alongside or separately from GEMA, depending on the use-case and contractual arrangement.
Yes, in most cases. Paying GEMA covers only the author/publisher layer of rights. If the music you use is a commercial recording (as opposed to a live performance of your own composition), the performers and the record label hold separate neighbouring rights under §§ 73–84 UrhG. GVL administers the statutory remuneration claims arising from the public communication of those recordings. Industry observers expect enforcement of these dual obligations to intensify as digital tracking improves and GVL expands its monitoring capabilities.
The practical steps differ depending on how you use music. Below are the five most common scenarios, each with a concise compliance path.
Concert halls, nightclubs and event organisers need a public performance license in Germany. Contact GEMA to obtain a blanket licence under the applicable tariff group for live or recorded music events. Provide event details, venue capacity, frequency, admission price, because GEMA calculates fees based on these variables. Where commercially released recordings are played (DJ sets, intermission music), register separately with GVL or confirm that GVL remuneration is included in the GEMA invoice. Retain all setlists and playlists for reporting and potential audit.
Shops, hotels, restaurants, gyms and offices that play background music must hold a GEMA licence and meet any applicable GVL obligation. GEMA offers dedicated tariff schedules for background music, calculated by factors such as floor space, number of loudspeakers and whether the music is audible to customers. A small café, for example, would follow these steps:
Radio stations, television broadcasters and on-demand streaming services negotiate blanket agreements directly with GEMA, often on an annual basis tied to revenue or subscriber numbers. GVL tariffs also apply to broadcast and streaming of commercial recordings. Platforms operating under the EU Digital Single Market Directive’s Article 17 obligations should ensure their licensing agreements cover user-uploaded content containing GEMA-repertoire works.
Using music in videos legally in Germany requires more than a GEMA blanket licence. Embedding a song in a YouTube video, Instagram reel or corporate explainer engages synchronization rights (addressed in detail below), which GEMA does not administer collectively. Content creators must clear both the composition (via the publisher or, if the author is a GEMA member, through the publisher who administers the sync right) and the master recording (via the label). Major social platforms hold umbrella licences with GEMA for user-generated content, but these typically do not extend to commercial or branded content produced by businesses.
Synchronization, coupling music with moving images, is one of the most complex licensing scenarios. It is addressed in full in the next section. The key takeaway: GEMA does not grant sync licences collectively; businesses must negotiate directly with the publisher (for the composition) and the label (for the master).
For tailored guidance on any of these use-cases, consulting a copyright-specialist lawyer is strongly recommended. You can search the Global Law Experts lawyer directory and filter by Germany and Media & Entertainment.
Synchronization rights in Germany refer to the right to combine a musical work or recording with visual content, advertisements, films, video games, corporate presentations and online video. Because GEMA’s mandate does not extend to granting synchronization licences, businesses must secure clearances directly from two separate rights-holders.
When negotiating synchronization rights in Germany, ensure the agreement addresses each of the following points:
The party commissioning the audiovisual work, typically the production company, advertising agency or brand, bears responsibility for securing and paying for sync clearances. Early engagement with publishers and labels is critical; clearance timelines of four to eight weeks are common, and high-profile tracks can take considerably longer.
GEMA publishes detailed tariff schedules on its official website, grouped by use-case. While exact fees depend on variables specific to each business, the following table summarises the structure and approximate billing patterns for the most common scenarios.
| Use Case | GEMA Tariff Group (Example) | Typical Billing Cycle |
|---|---|---|
| Live music events | Tariff U (Unterhaltungsmusik), based on venue capacity, admission price, frequency | Per-event or monthly |
| Background music in retail / hospitality | Tariff for Hintergrundmusik, based on floor area, loudspeaker count | Annual (with option for quarterly) |
| Online streaming / on-demand | Tariff VR-OD, typically revenue- or subscriber-based | Quarterly or annual |
| Radio / television broadcast | Tariff R (Rundfunk), revenue share or flat fee models | Annual |
| Telephone hold music | Dedicated tariff, based on number of lines / callers | Annual |
GVL tariffs for neighbouring rights are published separately and often apply on top of GEMA fees. For public performance of commercial recordings, the GVL levy is typically calculated as a percentage supplement to the GEMA tariff or as an independent fee based on similar usage parameters. Businesses should consult the GEMA and GVL tariff pages directly for current rates, as tariffs are updated periodically through negotiations between the collecting societies and user associations.
GEMA registration is the first administrative step: businesses register as music users via the GEMA online portal, declare their intended use, receive a tariff classification and enter into a licence agreement. Invoices follow the agreed billing cycle, and GEMA expects timely payment, failure to pay triggers the enforcement mechanisms described below.
Failing to obtain the required licences, or falling behind on payments, exposes businesses to significant financial and legal consequences. GEMA actively monitors unlicensed music use and has the legal standing to enforce its members’ rights through civil proceedings.
If your business has been using music without proper licences, early voluntary disclosure to GEMA is the most effective remediation strategy. Industry observers expect that businesses that proactively approach GEMA, disclose past usage and negotiate a settlement, including back-payment of applicable tariffs, typically avoid the punitive surcharges and court costs that accompany contested enforcement. Consider the following steps:
Use this numbered checklist as a starting framework. Adapt it to your specific use-case and seek professional advice where needed.
While straightforward background-music licences can often be handled directly through the GEMA portal, several scenarios warrant professional legal advice:
To find a qualified copyright lawyer in Germany, use the Global Law Experts lawyer directory and filter by country and practice area.
Understanding how to license music in Germany requires businesses to navigate a layered rights framework, composition, master and neighbouring rights, each administered by different organisations or rights-holders. For most commercial uses, compliance begins with GEMA registration and extends to GVL obligations and, where audiovisual content is involved, direct sync negotiations with publishers and labels. The consequences of non-compliance are real and growing: audits, injunctions, damages and reputational risk. A systematic approach, identify every use, classify the rights, secure the correct licences and maintain records, is the most reliable path to lawful and cost-effective music use. Where the stakes are high, specialist legal counsel ensures that agreements protect your interests and that your operations remain fully compliant.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Eva Vonau at VC LEGAL, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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