Search Copyrights
The Song Copyright Office (SCO) at SongCopyright.org is the world's leading independent music copyright registration service. It is the first choice of professional publishers, music organizations, songwriters, composers and lyricists. Beginners and professional award winning songwriters use this service. It was formed by an association of music industry bodies and experts to provide instant copyright protection and peace of mind for songwriters. Registration with The Song Copyright Office at SongCopyright.org publishes to the world that you have registered international copyright for your song, and it provides instant online verification of your copyright registration. An official Copyright Certificate is issued for each song registered and an official sworn Declaration of Registration is provided to lawyers and courts anywhere in the world in the event of ownership dispute. There is no quicker, easier and safer way to register and protect your international song copyright. Read more about SongCopyright.org and the international Song Copyright Office (SCO) here.
Your Questions Answered
How much does it cost? And what does it cover?
International Song Copyright Registration is US$40 per song. This is a one time payment for Lifetime Registration - you will never be asked for additional renewal fees. This fee covers protection, legal back up, online verification, certificates and provision of proof of your copyright registration to courts and lawyers anywhere in the world if there is a legal dispute over your song ownership. No other copyright service in the world, including the US Copyright Office, provides this high level of complete cover and protection for songwriters, and this is the reason that so many songwriters, composers, producers and music professionals use this service.
How do I register my song?
Registration is quick and very easy. When you click on the registration links on this website, or click here, you will be taken to the registration page.
Why register with SongCopyright.org? What are the advantages?
SongCopyright.org is the world's leading independent music copyright website and the first choice of thousands of professional publishers, organizations, songwriters, composers and lyricists. It was formed in close consultation with music industry bodies and experts to provide the dedicated specialized service that song copyright owners need. If your work is involved in a legal dispute SongCopyright.org will provide a secure and certified copy of your work and an official Declaration of Registration to lawyers and courts, anywhere in the world, in accordance with our Terms and Conditions. No other copyright service provides such a complete level of protection for your work.
Who registers their work at SongCopyright.org?
Songwriters who register for copyright protection with SongCopyright.org range from unknown beginners to top professional Gold and Platinum Album Award winners. We represent and protect writers from most countries in the world including the USA and Canada, the UK, Australia and New Zealand, all European countries, South America, and a growing number of Asian and African countries.
How can I show that my work is copyright registered at SongCopyright.org?
You should use the standard international copyright symbol © on all your work also write "SongCopyright.org" or "The Song Copyright Office" or "SCO Registered" or something similar. If your song is online you can place a link to SongCopyright.org with your song so that people can check your copyright registration for themselves and instantly see your Copyright Certificate.
What is Song Copyright exactly?
The international laws relating to song copyright state that your songs are your creative work and your property. This legal principle of ownership means that the writer controls and owns all rights relating to the use and reproduction of the song - including the right to sell or assign the copyright and ownership to another individual or company. This is the law under international legal agreements and it is the basic principle of copyright that is accepted throughout the world. Most countries have formalised the principles of copyright outlined above by signing up to an international agreement known as the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works. It was first adopted in 1886 as an agreement to honour the rights of all authors who are nationals of countries that are party to the convention. The current version of the convention is the Paris Act of 1971. The convention is administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). A search on the internet will show a number of sites with up to date lists of the countries that have signed. This international agreement provides legal protection to the authors of original works where these works have been presented in a tangible, fixed and physical form of expression.This agreement makes it very clear that as soon as your song, music or lyrics are written down, or recorded as a sound recording, they are automatically copyrighted and the writer(s) has/have full legal ownership. This is a very important point. It is not enough to compose a song in your head and keep it in your memory - it must also exist in a physical and tangible form, a form that others can see or hear, for the copyright rules to apply. So under the Berne Convention you officially and legally own the copyright in your work as soon as you express it in a tangible and verifiable form. This protection applies to both published and unpublished works.
Are song titles copyright protected?
No. Song titles are not protected under copyright law. Anyone and everyone is free to write and publish a song with the title "Yesterday" or "Imagine" or "My Way" for example. There are thousands of different songs that share exactly the same titles.
Why should I register my song if I own the copyright anyway?
Under the Berne Convention there is no legal requirement to register your work with any official body as your ownership is automatic. But if you don't register this can cause problems when someone copies your song and tries to pass it off as their own. Unfortunately this can happen to any composer or songwriter at any time and the risks today, with widespread access to music on the internet and mobile devices, are greater than ever before. If this happens to you it will be necessary to prove that you wrote the work in question, and this may be difficult if the song was not registered. If someone hears your song on the internet or reads the lyrics on a website, or your neighbour overhears you composing it in your home, or your band plays it at gig, or you enter it in a competition, someone could easily decide to copy it and pass it off as their own composition. Copyright theft happens every day and copyright registration may provide the insurance that you need to help you protect your valuable creative work and enforce your legal rights.
Do you offer any other services?
Yes. We offer a number of specialist services that are only available to music industry bodies and organizations but these services are not available to the general public. The song copyright registration service is the only service that is currently available to individual songwriters. Please note that for strict legal reasons we do not, and cannot, offer personal legal advice to individual songwriters.
I have a question that is not answered above. Can I contact you about this?
You can contact us using the contact form if you have any further questions about our services that are not answered above and we will be pleased to deal with your query. You should also read the Copyright Law page and the Terms and Conditions - you will probably find your question is already answered there.
International Song Copyright Registration is US$40 per song. This is a one time payment for Lifetime Registration - you will never be asked for additional renewal fees. This fee covers protection, legal back up, online verification, certificates and provision of proof of your copyright registration to courts and lawyers anywhere in the world if there is a legal dispute over your song ownership. No other copyright service in the world, including the US Copyright Office, provides this high level of complete cover and protection for songwriters, and this is the reason that so many songwriters, composers, producers and music professionals use this service.
How do I register my song?
Registration is quick and very easy. When you click on the registration links on this website, or click here, you will be taken to the registration page.
Why register with SongCopyright.org? What are the advantages?
SongCopyright.org is the world's leading independent music copyright website and the first choice of thousands of professional publishers, organizations, songwriters, composers and lyricists. It was formed in close consultation with music industry bodies and experts to provide the dedicated specialized service that song copyright owners need. If your work is involved in a legal dispute SongCopyright.org will provide a secure and certified copy of your work and an official Declaration of Registration to lawyers and courts, anywhere in the world, in accordance with our Terms and Conditions. No other copyright service provides such a complete level of protection for your work.
Who registers their work at SongCopyright.org?
Songwriters who register for copyright protection with SongCopyright.org range from unknown beginners to top professional Gold and Platinum Album Award winners. We represent and protect writers from most countries in the world including the USA and Canada, the UK, Australia and New Zealand, all European countries, South America, and a growing number of Asian and African countries.
How can I show that my work is copyright registered at SongCopyright.org?
You should use the standard international copyright symbol © on all your work also write "SongCopyright.org" or "The Song Copyright Office" or "SCO Registered" or something similar. If your song is online you can place a link to SongCopyright.org with your song so that people can check your copyright registration for themselves and instantly see your Copyright Certificate.
What is Song Copyright exactly?
The international laws relating to song copyright state that your songs are your creative work and your property. This legal principle of ownership means that the writer controls and owns all rights relating to the use and reproduction of the song - including the right to sell or assign the copyright and ownership to another individual or company. This is the law under international legal agreements and it is the basic principle of copyright that is accepted throughout the world. Most countries have formalised the principles of copyright outlined above by signing up to an international agreement known as the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works. It was first adopted in 1886 as an agreement to honour the rights of all authors who are nationals of countries that are party to the convention. The current version of the convention is the Paris Act of 1971. The convention is administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). A search on the internet will show a number of sites with up to date lists of the countries that have signed. This international agreement provides legal protection to the authors of original works where these works have been presented in a tangible, fixed and physical form of expression.This agreement makes it very clear that as soon as your song, music or lyrics are written down, or recorded as a sound recording, they are automatically copyrighted and the writer(s) has/have full legal ownership. This is a very important point. It is not enough to compose a song in your head and keep it in your memory - it must also exist in a physical and tangible form, a form that others can see or hear, for the copyright rules to apply. So under the Berne Convention you officially and legally own the copyright in your work as soon as you express it in a tangible and verifiable form. This protection applies to both published and unpublished works.
Are song titles copyright protected?
No. Song titles are not protected under copyright law. Anyone and everyone is free to write and publish a song with the title "Yesterday" or "Imagine" or "My Way" for example. There are thousands of different songs that share exactly the same titles.
Why should I register my song if I own the copyright anyway?
Under the Berne Convention there is no legal requirement to register your work with any official body as your ownership is automatic. But if you don't register this can cause problems when someone copies your song and tries to pass it off as their own. Unfortunately this can happen to any composer or songwriter at any time and the risks today, with widespread access to music on the internet and mobile devices, are greater than ever before. If this happens to you it will be necessary to prove that you wrote the work in question, and this may be difficult if the song was not registered. If someone hears your song on the internet or reads the lyrics on a website, or your neighbour overhears you composing it in your home, or your band plays it at gig, or you enter it in a competition, someone could easily decide to copy it and pass it off as their own composition. Copyright theft happens every day and copyright registration may provide the insurance that you need to help you protect your valuable creative work and enforce your legal rights.
Do you offer any other services?
Yes. We offer a number of specialist services that are only available to music industry bodies and organizations but these services are not available to the general public. The song copyright registration service is the only service that is currently available to individual songwriters. Please note that for strict legal reasons we do not, and cannot, offer personal legal advice to individual songwriters.
I have a question that is not answered above. Can I contact you about this?
You can contact us using the contact form if you have any further questions about our services that are not answered above and we will be pleased to deal with your query. You should also read the Copyright Law page and the Terms and Conditions - you will probably find your question is already answered there.