Skiza, Spotify, and YouTube: How the 2026 laws force platforms to pay you faster

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For years, Kenyan artists have voiced a single, echoing frustration: “We are famous, but we are broke.” While millions stream music on Spotify or use Skiza tunes, the trickle-down of royalties has historically been slow, inconsistent, and opaque.

That changes in 2026. Under the dual-engine of the Copyright and Related Rights Bill 2026 and the Creative Economy Bill 2026, the government has introduced a “Royalty Reset.” This isn’t just a policy shift—it’s a total overhaul of how money moves from a listener’s ear to an artist’s pocket.

1. The “Digital Revenue Right”: mandatory transparency

The cornerstone of the 2026 reform is the Digital Revenue Right. In the past, creators were often at the mercy of whatever figures streaming platforms or middlemen provided.

Real-time data audits

Under Section 59 of the new Bill, streaming giants (Spotify, YouTube, Apple Music) and local digital service providers are now legally mandated to provide transparent, verifiable usage data. This means:

  • No more “Black Box” revenue: Creators (and KECOBO) gain the right to audit the logs to ensure every stream is accounted for.
  • 30-Day Settlement: The new laws introduce a “Fast-Track” clause requiring platforms to settle dues within 30 days of the accounting period.

The 9% New Media Tariff

As of January 1, 2026, the government gazetted new Consolidated Tariffs. “New Media Services” are now taxed at 9% of gross revenue (with a minimum of Ksh 300,000). This creates a massive, legally protected pool of funds specifically for digital creators.

2. Resale royalties: A lifeline for visual artists

Perhaps the most “creative” addition to the 2026 Bill is the Artist Right of Resale (Section 53). For the first time in Kenyan history, visual artists (painters, sculptors, and digital illustrators) will benefit from the long-term appreciation of their work.

  • How it works: If you sell a painting today for Ksh 20,000, and five years later a gallery resells it for Ksh 200,000, you are legally entitled to a percentage of that resale price.
  • The Goal: This prevents “starving artists” from watching their early works become million-shilling assets for collectors while the creator sees none of the profit.

3. The end of the “Skiza Middleman”

The Skiza tune revenue split has been a battlefield for a decade. The 2026 framework codifies the 52% Artist Rule signed into the previous amendment but adds a new layer of enforcement:

  • Direct-to-Artist Settlement: The Bill encourages telcos to bypass “Content Providers” who often sat on funds for months.
  • Compounded Penalties: Any entity (Telco or CMO) that fails to remit royalties on time now faces a 5% monthly compounded penalty. This makes it more expensive to hold onto an artist’s money than to pay it out.

Featured snippet: The 2026 royalty reset (Old vs. New)

Use this table as a “Featured Snippet” to rank for “Kenya music royalty laws 2026” or “Skiza revenue split.”

FeatureOld Law (Pre-2026)New Law (2026 Bill & Tariffs)
Payment TimelineInconsistent (often 6-12 months)30-Day Mandatory Settlement
Transparency“Opaque” reporting from platformsMandatory Real-Time Data Access
Visual Art Resale0% (Creator gets nothing on resale)Mandatory Resale Royalty %
Non-ComplianceNegligible fines5% Monthly Compounded Penalty
New Media TariffUnclear/Negotiated9% of Gross Revenue (Gazetted)

4. The angle: is this the end of “Opaque” Payments?

The 2026 laws move the Kenyan creative from a position of “begging” for royalties to demanding them as a legal right. By merging the Creative Economy Bill (which handles the environment and registration) with the Copyright Bill (which handles the money), the government is creating a 360-degree shield for creators.

Crucial Requirement: To trigger these protections, you must be on the National Register of Creatives. The 2026 enforcement machinery relies on this database to verify who to pay and who to protect.

WATENE LOYFORD
WATENE LOYFORD
Watene Loyford is a Kenyan journalist at Top News Kenya whose work spans governance reporting, current affairs, and lifestyle coverage. He reports on government developments, emerging national conversations, and political stories while also covering food culture and lifestyle trends that reflect changing social interests across the country.

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