How to Move Your Music to a New Distributor Without Losing Streams
Gary WhittakerHow to Switch Music Distributors Without Losing Streams
If you switch distributors the wrong way, you can reset your catalog, lose playlist momentum, and create profile problems you did not need. This page is built to help you change platforms with a plan, not guess your way through it.
This guide is designed for artists moving from one distributor to another, including creator decisions around a backend-only move, a visual brand refresh, or a full rebrand. It now includes a free downloadable execution tool so you can move from understanding the process to actually doing it properly.
This is not a “growth hack” page. Switching distributors is backend infrastructure work. Done right, it protects your catalog. Done wrong, it creates avoidable damage.
Who This Is For
This guide is for artists and creator-operators who already have music live on streaming platforms and want to change distributors without turning the move into a mess.
- Artists switching from CD Baby, TuneCore, DistroKid, or another distributor
- Creators moving into DistroKid or BandLab and wanting a cleaner backend setup
- People who want to refresh branding without accidentally restarting their catalog
- Anyone trying to understand whether their “rebrand” is really a transfer, a refresh, or a full reset
This is not for:
- First-time releases with no catalog to protect
- People who are comfortable starting over from zero
- Artists making major audio, title, and identity changes all at once without expecting risk
The Core Rule
You are not physically “moving” a file from one distributor to another. You are trying to get stores and streaming services to recognize that your new delivery is still the same release underneath the distributor change.
What stores look at
- Track-level identifiers where available
- Metadata consistency
- Audio consistency
- Release structure and artist naming
What causes trouble
- Changing too many elements at the same time
- Taking the old version down too early
- Uploading with missing or mismatched track details
- Assuming “rebrand” means the same thing in every situation
What Actually Happens When People Do This Wrong
Streams reset
If the new version is treated like a new release instead of a connected one, your numbers can restart from zero on that listing.
Playlists disconnect
Editorial and user-playlist ties can break when the reconnect fails or when the old version is removed too early.
Profiles split
Your catalog can end up spread across different artist pages, which creates cleanup work and weakens your public presence.
Before You Upload Anything, Download the Tool
If you are serious about protecting your catalog, do not rely on memory and do not assume you will figure it out mid-process.
What the free tool gives you
- Decision Control to define your rebrand level
- Pre-Upload Control so you do not miss critical details
- Transfer Execution tracking for releases, metadata, and timing
- Platform Alignment and Final Validation before you promote anything
Use it for the actual move
This is not filler. It is the working handoff from this article to the real execution process.
Get the workbook before you upload anything to your new distributor.
Quick Decision Guide
Before you touch your catalog, decide what kind of move you are actually making. Most confusion starts here.
Level 1 — Backend Move
Same artist name. Same public identity. Same covers if you want. You are mainly changing the delivery platform and protecting the catalog.
Level 2 — Visual Brand Refresh
Same artist name, but you update cover art, bios, or presentation. This is still not a full identity change, but it adds more variables to manage.
Level 3 — Full Rebrand
New artist identity, new presentation, and often new platform alignment across socials, websites, and profiles. This is closer to a reset than a simple transfer.
| Level | What Changes | Risk Level | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Level 1 | Distributor changes, public identity stays the same | Low | You mainly want better backend control or a new distributor relationship |
| Level 2 | Distributor changes plus visual/profile upgrades under the same artist name | Moderate | You want your catalog to look stronger without changing who you are publicly |
| Level 3 | Distributor changes plus a new artist identity | High | You are intentionally repositioning everything, not just switching platforms |
The Universal Transfer System
This is the safest general framework for a distributor switch when your goal is to preserve catalog continuity as much as possible.
Upload to the new distributor first
Start with the destination distributor. Do not remove the old version first. Build the new delivery carefully so stores can recognize it when it goes live.
Match the release as closely as possible
Keep the move controlled. The closer the metadata, audio, structure, and identifiers are to the previous version, the better your odds of a clean reconnect.
Wait until the new release is live
Do not assume the upload is done just because the distributor accepted it. Confirm the release is actually live on key stores first.
Then remove the old version
Once the replacement version is live, request takedown from the old distributor. Short overlap is usually better than early removal.
Check for profile or catalog issues
After the switch, confirm your releases are showing on the correct artist profile and that your catalog is not split across duplicate pages.
Checklist Before You Upload
Catalog control
- Confirm your track-level identifiers from the old release
- Pull together your final audio files before starting
- Check titles, spelling, track order, and release structure
- Decide whether this is Level 1, Level 2, or Level 3 before you upload
Timing control
- Do not switch in the middle of an active campaign if you can avoid it
- Do not remove the old version before the new one is live
- Do not mix old branding and new branding carelessly across platforms
- Do not assume every store will behave exactly the same way
Download the Distributor Switch Execution Guide
If you want to do this properly without guessing, the next step is the free JR Creator Consultant Tool™. It turns this page into a working execution process you can actually follow.
What the download includes
- Pre-switch checklist
- Track-level identifier tracking sheet
- Distributor move sequence
- Rebrand decision worksheet
- Post-switch verification checklist
- Sheet-by-sheet flow so you know what to do next
Best use case
Use the download when you are ready to execute the move, not when you are still casually browsing. This is the handoff from understanding the process to doing the work without missing critical steps.
Download the Excel workbook and complete it before you touch your live catalog.
Most Common Mistakes
Changing too much at once
People try to switch distributors, change titles, swap art, replace audio, and rebrand all in one shot. That is how clean transfers become risky resets.
Assuming every store behaves the same
One service may reconnect smoothly while another creates a profile problem. Build your plan with that in mind.
Not planning cleanup
Even a good move may require profile cleanup, especially if artist pages split or a service routes music to the wrong place.
Important Note About Artist Name Changes
If your rebrand includes changing the artist name itself, the move becomes less predictable. That does not mean it cannot be done. It means you should treat it as a more advanced operation.
If you keep the same artist name and only refresh visuals, bios, and overall presentation, your path is more controlled than if you change the artist identity itself.
DistroKid vs BandLab
The transfer logic is broadly similar. What changes more is the workflow and creator experience around it.
DistroKid may fit better if you:
- Release often and want a fast, stripped-down distribution workflow
- Already understand basic metadata, release prep, and account management
- Want a distribution-first setup
BandLab may fit better if you:
- Prefer an all-in-one environment around creation and release
- Want a more connected tool ecosystem
- Like the idea of building inside one broader creator workflow
The right choice depends less on hype and more on how you actually work.
When You Should and Shouldn’t Switch
Better timing
- Between release cycles
- When your catalog is stable
- Before you launch a new campaign, not during one
Worse timing
- In the middle of active promotion
- While ads or playlist campaigns are running
- When you do not yet have your files and details organized
How to Use the JR Creator Consultant Tool™
The free workbook is meant to be used in order. Do not jump around and do not wait until the middle of the move to start filling it out.
Start Here
Open the workbook and read the opening tab first. It gives you the sequence of the system so you know where to begin and what comes next.
Decision Control
Use this tab to define what kind of move you are making. This is where you decide whether you are doing a backend move, a visual refresh, or a higher-risk full rebrand.
Pre-Upload Control
Fill this out before you upload anything. This is your stop-and-check stage for identifiers, files, titles, artist naming, release structure, and timing.
Transfer Execution
Track each release and each important detail during the move. This is where the process becomes real. If you skip this tab, you are relying on memory instead of control.
Platform Alignment
Use this tab to keep your profiles and platform links organized while the new version goes live and the old version is being removed.
Final Validation
Before you announce anything, confirm streams, pages, playlists, and catalog placement. This is where you catch issues before promotion turns a backend mistake into a public one.
The point of the tool is to help you prevent mistakes, not document them after the damage is already done.
Final Word
Switching distributors does not grow your audience by itself. It does not fix weak songs. It does not improve your catalog automatically.
What it can do is give you a cleaner backend, a better workflow, and a stronger foundation for what comes next.
If you do it carelessly, you create problems that did not need to happen.
Don’t Guess Your Way Through This
Reading the guide helps. Using the tool is what gives you control.
Plan it. Execute it. Protect your catalog.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I switch music distributors without losing streams?
Yes, but it is not automatic. The safer route is to upload to the new distributor first, keep the move tightly controlled, wait until the new version is live, and only then remove the old version.
Should I remove my old release before uploading to the new distributor?
No. Removing the old version too early is one of the easiest ways to create avoidable problems.
Can I refresh my artwork and artist profile without changing my artist name?
Yes. That is the safer visual refresh path. It still requires control, but it is less risky than changing the artist name itself.
What if I want a full rebrand with a new artist name?
That is possible, but it is less predictable and often behaves more like a reset than a simple transfer. Expect more cleanup and more risk.
Does this only apply to CD Baby to DistroKid?
No. The logic is broader than one platform pair. The exact dashboard steps vary, but the transfer principles remain similar.
What is the safest option overall?
A backend move with no public identity change is the safest. A visual refresh under the same artist name is next. A full identity change is the highest-risk path.
Do I need to verify my catalog after the move?
Yes. Always verify the artist profile, release placement, and general catalog appearance after the switch goes live.
How should I use the JR Creator Consultant Tool?
Use it in order: Start Here, Decision Control, Pre-Upload Control, Transfer Execution, Platform Alignment, Final Validation, and Resources. Complete each step before moving to the next.