Producer Points Calculator for Record Deals

Producer Points Calculator

Estimate a producer royalty from record deal points, royalty base, net receipts, producer advance recoupment, artist recoupment gates, and the final split among up to four producers.

🎛 Record Deal Presets

Model: Load a named deal structure, then adjust the royalty base, points, recoupment account, producer advance, and producer split table to match the contract or royalty statement.

Royalty Base And Recoupment Inputs
Currency symbol only; exchange conversion is not applied.
Total master income or statement receipts before deductions.
Select the contract language closest to the producer clause.
Enter 3 for three producer points.
Used when the base is units multiplied by PPD.
Published price to dealer or negotiated wholesale base.
Deducted from gross to calculate net receipts.
Optional reserve against returns, disputes, or statement holds.
Mechanical passthroughs, chargebacks, delivery, or approved fees.
Used for artist royalty base and recoupment gate estimates.
Advance and recording balance that may gate producer payment.
Recoupable from producer royalties before additional payment.
Engineer, programmer, studio, travel, or other producer recoupables.
Controls whether post-recoup producer royalties are payable now.
Some clauses accrue from record one but pay after recoupment.
👥 Split By Producer

Enter named producer shares. If the shares do not total 100%, the calculator normalizes the entered split so the payable producer royalty is fully assigned.

ProducerRole noteEntered split %Advance allocation %
Net Receipts
$0.00
after fees, reserves, and deductions
Producer Royalty Base
$0.00
selected contract base
Earned Producer Royalty
$0.00
points before recoupment
Royalty After Recoup
$0.00
payable producer pool
📝 Producer Split Output
ProducerRoleEntered splitNormalized splitAdvance sharePayable royalty
📊 Producer Points Spec Grid
3.0%
Producer points
Percentage applied to the selected royalty base.
Net
Royalty base
Gross, net receipts, PPD units, or artist royalty.
$0
Remaining recoupment
Balance left after earned producer royalties.
100%
Split total
Entered producer split before normalization.
💿 Royalty Base Reference
Base languageCalculator basisCommon useWatch item
Gross master receiptsAll gross income before deductionsSimple indie or direct-to-artist agreementsUsually higher than net receipts
Net receiptsGross less platform, reserves, and approved deductionsDistribution, licensing, and profit-share dealsDefine every deductible item clearly
PPD or wholesale baseEligible units multiplied by PPDTraditional physical and download accountingFree goods and returns may change eligible units
Artist royalty baseNet receipts multiplied by artist royalty rateProducer paid from artist royalty accountAll-in royalty language may reduce artist share
🔒 Recoupment Gate Table
Gate selectionProducer advanceArtist recoupmentPayment behavior
No recoupment gateIgnored for payoutIgnored for payoutEarned producer royalties are payable immediately
Recoup producer advance onlyRecouped firstTracked onlyRoyalty after producer advance becomes payable
Advance plus expensesAdvance and expenses recoupTracked onlyExpenses increase the producer recoupment account
Pay only after artist recoupmentNot deducted hereMust be fully recoupedProducer royalty may be held until the artist account clears
Advance plus artist gateRecouped firstMust be fully recoupedMost conservative payment timing estimate
🎧 Named Deal Preset Comparison
PresetBasePointsRecoupment emphasis
Indie Net SingleNet receipts3.0%Producer advance only
Major Album PPDPPD units4.0%Advance plus artist recoupment gate
Distribution Net DealNet receipts2.5%Advance plus approved producer expenses
Artist Royalty GateArtist royalty25.0%Producer paid from artist-side royalty base
Multi Producer RemixGross receipts1.5%Four producer split with no advance gate
📐 Producer Split Examples
Split setupProducer 1Producer 2Best use
Sole producer100%0%One producer controls the full points share
Main plus co-producer70%30%Lead producer with meaningful co-production
Track and vocal producer60%40%Separate track production and vocal production duties
Four-way remix team25%25%Use all four rows for equal remix or collective splits
📋 Statement Check Table
Statement lineCalculator fieldFormula checkReason
Gross receiptsGross master receiptsStarting income lineSets the top of the royalty waterfall
Distribution feeDistribution or platform feeGross multiplied by fee percentChanges the net receipts base
Royalty baseProducer royalty baseBase selected in the contractMost disputes start with base definition
Producer royaltyProducer pointsBase multiplied by points percentShows earned royalty before recoupment
Producer advanceProducer advanceDeducted from earned royalty when selectedSeparates earned royalties from cash payable now
Contract tip: Read the points clause together with the base definition. Three points on gross receipts can be very different from three points on the artist royalty base.
Recoupment tip: Keep producer advance recoupment separate from artist recoupment. The calculator shows both so the earned amount and payable amount stay visible.

Producer point are a percentage of the money that will go to the producer from the record deal. However, the producer may not understands how the producer points will become actual money for the producer. For example, a record deal may state that the producer will receive three points.

However, the producer may not understands what these three points apply to or how they will be calculated. The royalty bases is where the calculation begins for the producer points. The royalty base will ultimately determine the total amount of money that the producer points will applies to.

What Producer Points Mean and How They Work

For some record deal, the royalty base is set to gross master receipts. Gross master receipts mean that the total amount of money will be counted from the sale of the music before any fee is deducted. However, other deal may state that the royalty base will be net receipts.

Net receipts is the amount of money that will be left over from the sale of the music after the distribution fee, returns, and deductions is made. Some older deal may use the royalty base of published price to dealer multiplied by units sold. However, newer deals might use the producer points to apply to the artist royalty account.

The way that the royalty base is defined will ultimately change the amount of money that the producer will receive. Recoupment rule will dictate when the producer will receive the money from the record deal. There are recoupment rule for the producer’s benefit because producers usually receive advances on their earnings from the record deal.

Producers almost always receive advances on their advance for the record deal. The royalties that a producer earns from a track will be used to pay the producer advance. In some case, the producer expenses will be used to pay the advance.

In others, the artist will have to pay for their advance and recording cost before the artist pays the producer. Understanding the recoupment rules will allow a producer to plan their finances proper for creating new music. If a producer must wait many years for the artist to pay for their advance, it can pose a financial challenge for that producer.

You can use the producer point calculator to see where the money stop and where it starts for a record deal. Producer splits are used for when several individual will produce a single track. The splits will dictate how the producer pool money is divided up among each producer.

For example, if four individuals produce a song, they will not all earn the same percentage from the song. This is because one producer might have produced the beat for the song while another produced the vocals. The percentages for each producer might not always come to 100%.

In this case, there will be a normalization process to allocate all of the producer pool money. The producer point calculator will perform the split for each producer. The calculator will also show each producer the amount of money that each producer will earn.

The advance allocation must equal the producer split. If it do not, there will be dispute between the producers and the artist when the royalty statement is sent. Many mistake are made by producers that have a mismatch between the expectations of the producer points and the actual definition of those points in the contract.

For instance, the producer may work to earn three points on gross sales; however, the company may define the royalty base more narrow. This would cut the producer’s earnings in half. Additionally, producers assume that the producer will earn their advance; however, the contract may state that the artist must earn their advance and cost before the producer will be paid.

These mistake can be avoided by modeling the various producer point input prior to reviewing the royalty statement for the artist. The reference table on this page will help you to map out the language of the record deal to the producer point calculator settings. These table will help you map each clause in the deal memo to the correct setting in the producer point calculator.

There are also preset button for common deal types in the producer point calculator. These include indie net single deals, major label PPD deals, joint ventures, and multi-producer remixes. These buttons can save producers time in setting up the parameter for the deal that they will produce for there artist.

Due to the changing nature of record deals and music in particular, the parameters of the producer point calculator may have to be updated. For instance, a song that was produced as a remix might become a lead single, or the artist might earn their sync placement before the producer will be paid for any advance. These change can all be reflected in the producer point calculator to show producers how the producer pool might change.

The producer point calculator does not replace the record deal contract, but it can remove the guesswork that go along with that contract. The most important step for a producer to take prior to signing a contract is to run the number through the producer point calculator. By understanding how the royalty base, the producer points, the recoupment gate, and the producer splits interact within the record deal, the producer can have leverage when negotiating the terms of the record deal.

The producer can use this knowledge to negotiate a clause that appropriately protect the producers time and contribution to the music that they created.

Producer Points Calculator for Record Deals

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