Tidal Has New Rules for AI-Generated Music, Including No Royalties: What About Other Platforms? Tidal announced a new policy that AI-generated music will not be eligible for royalties, while Apple Music and Spotify have implemented disclosure and impersonation rules. The policy aims to prevent fraudulent activity and protect artists, raising questions about how other streaming platforms handle AI-generated content. Tidal https://www.complex.com/tag/tidal is taking a hard line on the proliferation of AI-generated music https://www.complex.com/tag/ai , revealing in a new policy that such sounds will not be eligible for royalties https://www.complex.com/tag/music-industry . Indeed, while AI-generated music will still be accepted on the platform, it will be held to what platform reps have described as a “higher standard of content integrity.” Naturally, this raises questions about not only the Tidal policy, specifically, but also what policies are in place on other streamers like Apple Music https://www.complex.com/tag/apple-music and Spotify https://www.complex.com/tag/spotify . Below, as we’ve done time and time again and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future , we take a closer look. How is Tidal handling AI-generated music? “Tidal is not here to bash technological advancement, with today’s launch of our AI policy. Let’s make that clear,” Tony Gervino, Tidal’s executive vice president and editor-in-chief, said https://tidal.com/magazine/article/were-for-real/1-98742 Monday June 29 . Instead, the main impetus behind Tidal’s new policy is the fact that listeners are currently being “inundated with music that is created completely AI-generated and impersonating existing artists purely for financial gain.” Starting mid-July, any AI-generated music that is determined to be “associated with fraudulent activity” of any kind will be blocked from the platform https://tidal.com/ai-policy . AI-generated music, more generally speaking, will be allowed, though none of it will be eligible to earn royalties. How is Apple Music handling AI-generated music? In March of this year, Apple Music was reported https://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com/apple-music-launches-ai-transparency-tags-but-only-if-labels-and-distributors-choose-to-declare-them/ to have launched AI disclosure tags as a requirement for labels and distributors. This was followed in May by a more detailed explanation of the platform’s stance on AI in a partners memo, per a report https://www.billboard.com/pro/apple-music-ai-music-stats-less-than-1-percent-plays-ai/ from Billboard at the time. In it, Apple leadership shared https://www.billboard.com/pro/apple-music-ai-music-stats-less-than-1-percent-plays-ai/ their estimate that less than a single percent of weekly plays on the platform stemmed from AI-generated music. Furthermore, according to the same memo, any AI-generated song found to be engaging in manipulative practices will be removed. Apple Music, notably, has its own in-house tech aimed at tracking down AI-generated content, though it sounds like the platform will continue to push for transparency from labels and distributors. Complex has reached out to Apple Music reps for comment. How is Spotify handling AI-generated music? Last September, Spotify shared https://newsroom.spotify.com/2025-09-25/spotify-strengthens-ai-protections/ a lengthy breakdown of what its leadership says is being done to protect artists, songwriters, and producers in the face of AI-generated music. Key features outlined in their breakdown include https://newsroom.spotify.com/2025-09-25/spotify-strengthens-ai-protections/ a then-new impersonation policy such impersonation is only allowed if the artist being impersonated has given the go-ahead , a music spam filter, and AI disclosures in credits. The latter is said to be inspired by a desire to strengthen “trust across the platform,” with industry partners including EMPIRE and DistroKid confirmed to be involved. For more clarity, Complex has also reached out to Spotify. This story may be updated.