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Crew & Production > Composer Agreements for Film: What Indie Filmmakers Get Wrong — and How to Fix It
Composer Agreements for Indie Film

April 2, 2026

Educational Article

Composer Agreements for Film: What Indie Filmmakers Get Wrong — and How to Fix It

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Thoolie Team

Independent filmmakers almost always reach the composer agreement stage too late. By the time a composer is hired, you’re deep into post-production, the score is already evolving, and everybody feels collaborative enough that formal contract discussions get pushed aside. It feels easier to “just figure it out.”

That approach works—until it doesn’t.

A poorly structured or incomplete composer agreement isn’t just a legal technicality. It can derail delivery, delay insurance, jeopardize distribution, or expose your film to rights disputes that are expensive to unwind.

This guide breaks down exactly what a film composer agreement must include — and is part of Thoolie’s complete Crew Agreements for Indie Film hub.

Why Composer Agreements Fail (and Why It Matters More Than You Think)

The Biggest Misconception: “If I paid for the music, I own it.”

This is the single most damaging misunderstanding in indie filmmaking.

Payment does not automatically equal ownership.
Unless the agreement explicitly includes:

…your composer may legally retain ownership or co‑ownership of the score.

If rights aren’t clearly transferred, you may not control how the music is edited, distributed, licensed, or altered. Distributors won’t take your word for it—they want paperwork confirming chain of title.

Your composer agreement is the document that determines whether you actually own the score. Thoolie’s Composer Agreement covers work-for-hire ownership, deliverables, revision limits, soundtrack rights, loan-outs, and everything E&O insurers look for. Lawyer-drafted for indie productions. Ready in minutes. Get the Composer Agreement

Where Composer Agreements Quietly Break Down

Composer agreements typically fail not in dramatic ways—but in quiet omissions. These oversights feel small early on but cause massive issues during delivery.

Deliverables Are Almost Always Underspecified

Most agreements say something vague like “composer will deliver the score.”
In reality, productions need:

  • Final mixes
  • Stems (dialogue‑free components)
  • Alternate versions (TV cuts, festival cuts, trailer mixes)
  • Session files or project files
  • A completed cue sheet
  • Metadata and labeling consistent with distributor specs

When these aren’t defined upfront, you either don’t receive them—or you renegotiate under pressure.

Revision Expectations Are Undefined

Composers expect creative iteration; producers expect revision limits.

Without clarity, revisions become:

  • A source of friction
  • A budget problem
  • A timeline problem
  • A relationship problem

Define rounds of revisions, approval stages, and what constitutes “out of scope” work.

Payment Terms Create Production Delays

The issue isn’t usually how much—it’s:

  • When payments are made
  • What triggers milestones
  • What happens if post shifts
  • Whether additional revisions or delays affect compensation

Vague terms = mismatched expectations = unnecessary conflict.

The Budgeting Question Filmmakers Rarely Address Early Enough

Who Pays for the Production of the Music?

Composers’ fees rarely include:

  • Recording musicians
  • Studio time
  • Mixing
  • Mastering
  • Orchestration
  • Live instrumentation costs
  • MIDI mockups
  • Engineering support

Some productions expect the composer to absorb these costs. Some provide a dedicated music budget. Some structure an all‑in fee.

All approaches can work. Problems only arise when expectations aren’t explicitly documented.

The Overlooked Rights Issues That Come Back Later

Soundtrack Rights & Publishing

Indie productions often treat soundtrack releases as an afterthought—but distributing a soundtrack involves real rights:

  • Who owns the master?
  • Who owns the publishing?
  • Does the composer get a writer’s share only, or also publisher’s share?
  • Does the producer retain release rights?
  • Will revenue be shared?

If your film finds an audience, even modestly, these become urgent questions. Plan early, not when Spotify is already asking for paperwork.

Loan-Out Companies: Small Detail, Big Problems

If Your Composer Works Through a Loan‑Out

Many composers operate through an LLC or loan‑out company for tax and liability reasons.

Your agreement must:

  • Pay the loan-out entity
  • Bind the individual composer to actually perform the work
  • Specify deliverables and deadlines clearly
  • Ensure rights are transferred by the proper party

If you miss either of those layers, your agreement may be unenforceable.

Delivery: What Distributors and E&O Insurers Actually Look For

At the distribution stage, creativity is irrelevant. What matters is:

  • Do you own the score?
  • Did the composer deliver all required assets?
  • Is the chain of title free of holes?
  • Are all rights cleared, assigned, and properly documented?

If even one is unclear, your film may stall at delivery—costing time, insurance premiums, and distribution opportunities.

Composer Agreement for Independent Film from Student to Ultra Low Budget Productions

How to Fix All of This: What a Strong Composer Agreement Must Include

A strong composer agreement doesn’t need to be complicated—just complete.

Below is a checklist you can use to ensure your agreement holds up through delivery and distribution.

Composer Agreement Essential Checklist

A. Ownership

  • Work‑made‑for‑hire
  • Assignment of all copyright interests
  • Exclusive rights for the producer
  • Rights to edit, adapt, remix, and re‑record
  • Perpetual, worldwide usage

B. Deliverables

Include every asset needed for distribution:

  • Full score (final mixes)
  • Stems
  • Alt versions
  • Session/project files
  • Cue sheet
  • Music logs and metadata
  • Agreements for subcontracted musicians/engineers

C. Timeline & Revision Structure

  • Milestones with dates
  • Number of revisions included
  • Approval process
  • Additional revision rates

D. Payment Terms

  • Deposit
  • Milestone payments
  • Completion payment
  • What happens if production shifts
  • Fees for out‑of‑scope work

E. Costs & Budgeting

  • Who pays for musicians
  • Who pays for studio time
  • Who pays for mixing & mastering
  • All‑in vs. itemized budget
  • Composer fee vs. music budget

F. Rights & Publishing

  • Publishing split
  • Soundtrack rights
  • Mechanical licensing
  • Composer’s writer share
  • Producer’s publisher share
  • Royalty arrangements if applicable

G. Loan‑Out Entity Requirements

  • Entity information
  • Personal performance guarantee
  • Proper assignment language
  • Invoicing instructions

H. Delivery Requirements for Distribution

  • Written confirmation of ownership
  • No outstanding claims
  • Proof of contractor agreements
  • Cue sheets ready for PROs
  • E&O‑ready documentation

Create Your Composer Agreement (The Right Way, the First Time)

If you’re bringing on a composer, this is one of those agreements that’s easier to do right from the start than to fix later.

The Composer Agreement (Non-Union – Film) is built for how indie productions actually work — with clear ownership, defined deliverables, and terms that hold up through distribution and E&O.

Final Thought

Music is one of the most emotionally powerful parts of your film.
The agreement behind it shouldn’t be.

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The Thoolie Team is a group of entertainment lawyers, producers, and creators dedicated to simplifying legal for indie filmmakers and creative professionals. We build smart templates, guides, and resources that help you protect your work — without breaking your budget.

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